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
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