Name: Baraiya Bhavna P.
Roll No: 03
Paper: The Victorian Literature
Topic: Development of Poetry in the Victorian age
SEM: 02
The Development
Of Poetry
In
The Victorian Age
The Victorian epoch was exceedingly
productive of literary work of a high quality, but, except in the novel, the
amount of actual innovation is by no mean great. Writers were as a rule content
to work upon formal models, and the improvements they did achieve were often
dubious and unimportant.
The lyrical output:
The lyrical output is very large and varied, as a glance through the
works of the poets already mentioned will show. In form there is little of fresh
interest. Tennyson was content to follow the methods of Keats, though
Browning’s complicated forms and Swinburne’s long musical lines were more
freely used by them than by any previous writers.
Descriptive And Narrative Poetry:
In
descriptive and narrative poetry there is a greater advance to chronicle. In
subject –for example,
In the poems of Browning and Morris-there is great
variety, embracing many climes and periods; in method there is much diversity,
ranging from the cultured elegance of Tennyson’s English landscapes to the bold
impressionism of the poems of Whitman. The pre-Raphaelite school, also united several
features which had not been seen before in combination. These were a fondness
for medieval themes treated in an unconventional manner, a richly coloured
pictorial effect, and a studied and melodious simplicity. The works of Rosseetti,
Morris, and Swinburne provide many examples of this development of poetry. On
the whole we can say that Victorians were strongest on the descriptive side of
poetry, which agreed with the more meditative habits of the period, as
contrasted with the warmer and more lyrical emotions of the previous age.
There were
many attempts at purely narrative poetry, with interesting results. Tennyson
thought of reviving the epic, but in him the epical impulse was not
sufficiently strong, and his great narrative poem was produced as smaller
fragments which he called idylls. Browning’s Ring and the Book is curious, for
it can be called a psychological epic-a narrative in which emotion removes
action from the chief place. In this class of poetry The Earthly Paradise of
William Morris is a return to the old romantic tale as we find it in the works
of Chaucer.
Style:
In the case of poetry the more ornate
style was represented in Tennyson, who developed artistic schemes of vowel
music, alliteration, and other devices in a manner quite unprecedented. The
Pre-Raphaelites carried the method still further. In diction they were simpler
than Tennyson, but their vocabulary was more archaic and their mass of detail
more highly coloured. The style of Browning was to certain extent a protest
against this aureate diction. He substituted for it simplicity and a heady
speed, especially in his earlier lyrics; his more mature obscurity was merely
an effect of his eager imagination and reckless impetuosity. Matthew Arnold, in
addition, was too classical in style to care for overdeveloped picturesqueness,
and wrote with a studied simplicity. On the whole, however, we can say that the
average poetical style of this period, as a natural reaction against the
simpler mathods of the period immediately preceding, was ornate rather than
simple.
Conclusion:
The major poets of the
Victorian era are Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1809-1892) and Robert Browning
(1812-1889). Both are prolific and varied, and their work defies easy
classification.
Tennyson makes
extensive use of classical myth and Arthurian legend, and has been praised for the
beautiful and musical qualities of his writing.
Browning's chief
interest is in people; he uses blank verse in writing dramatic monologues in which
the speaker achieves a kind of self-portraiture: his subjects are both
historical individuals (Fra Lippo Lippi, Andrea del Sarto) and representative
types or caricatures (Mr. Sludge the Medium).
Other Victorian poets of note include Browning's wife, Elizabeth Barrett
Browning (1806-1861) and Christina Rossetti (1830-1894). Gerard Manley Hopkins
(1844-1889) is notable for his use of what he calls “sprung rhythm”; as in Old
English verse syllables are not counted, but there is a pattern of stresses.
Hopkins' work was not well-known until very long after his death.
Hello Bhavna ,You write about Victorian poetry,I suggest that you can add some points about which poet has used that style in Victorian era.Thanks..Good Luck..
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