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The Romantic Era: The Pain of Composition Romanticism allowed poets to have the world at their

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The Romantic Era: The Pain of Composition Romanticism allowed poets to have the world at their fingertips. In the course of the American and French Revolutions, political, social, and economic traditions were being shaken. No longer were they bound to what was thought of as appropriate topics for writing. These poets were allowed to use firsthand experience to guide their creativity. Romantics created their poetry by using their own heartfelt emotions. William Blake, I believe, was a visionary with more of a theological or spiritual tone in both his writings and his paintings, whereas William Wordsworth used temporal viewpoints to help him describe his reality of nature. Blake and Wordsworth both used their talent for creating art and …show more content…

This gives off a light and carefree emotion to the reader as they mentally picture the older folk and the younger children sharing a repeating bond. You will also find Wordsworth revisiting his childhood in “Lines” where he states: For future years. And so I dare to hope, Though changed, no doubt, from what I was when first I came among these hills; (quoted in Lines, Wordsworth, lines 65-67) Wordsworth gives his audience his experience of looking back on his childhood. Even though things have changed, and he has changed and grown older, he still has that familiar feeling that comes over him when he revisits the Abbey. He hopes that the Abbey will always remain there. Blake and Wordsworth each wrote a heartfelt poem about London, England. The poems were written about the same physical location, however, the perception and the visuals seem to be completely different. Blake recalls tears, fear, cursing, and plagues, while Wordsworth portrays London as being pure, majestic, and free. The two poets were not more than ten years apart, and I could not find valid research that confirmed whether they knew each other or not, so I am going to give them both credit for their imagination and perception of creating two different Londons. I perceive the main difference between the two authors as being the extremes of which they write. Blake takes on a

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