Michael

In no particular order, the class notes:
  • The world does not exist unless you imagine it to be a certain way
  • Perceiving =/= conceiving (couldn't find a "not equal to" sign)
  • All our wiles and feelings find a mirror in Nature
  • Our experiences make us sublime (not above and beyond, but existing in a synergy with the world) - every experience reminds us of who we are
  • Wordsworth: Romantic, sensuous;
  • seeing the heart, the core of everything - enjoying the beauty in everything
  • simplicity of language and diction
  • aesthetic
  • calls for imaginary powers
  • sublime and transcendent
  • Blake - mysticism
  • Shelley - scientific temper - the world is charged with this crackling, electric, buzzing energy
  • Coleridge - supernatural
  • Byron - Dark forces, earthiness, communion with Nature
  • Keats is the high priest among the Romantics: Nature was, in fact, his religion, and he has been called 'nature's high priest'  ...
  • HOOOOOO MY GADDD LOOK AT THIS COMPARISON IT'S AMAZING!!! http://www.123helpme.com/assets/13517.html
  • Description of Michael: lines 34 through 47
  • Brutal intrusion of urbanization into the countryside
  • Not about father and son (or Michael and Luke) but about filial piety
  • Relationship would have endured but didn't because of circumstances - not about blaming Luke
  • cornerstone is a metaphor
  • ageing gracefully - quiet, peaceful deaths
  • it's the little things in love that aren't seen or described in empirical poetry, that the Romantics show, and revel in, in all its beauty

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Atticus Passage

Lajwanti by Rajinder Singh Bedi

Jurmana - Premchand