Paper: 02
Literature of the Neo - Classical Period
Smt.S.B.Gardi Department of English, MKBU
Vachchhalata Joshi
Roll no.21
Vachchhalatajoshi.14@gmail.com
Topic : The Transitional Poets
The Transitional Poets
Introduction:
The eighteenth-century is usually known
as the century of "prose and reason," the age in which neoclassicism
reigned supreme and in which all romantic tendencies lay dormant, if not
extinct. But that is a verdict too sweeping to be true.
In this century-especially, the later
part of it-we can see numerous cracks in the classical edifice through which
seems to be peeping the multicolored light of romanticism. In the later years
of this century a large number of new influences were at work on English
sensibility and temper. The change signalized a change in the ethos of poetry
and, in fact, literature as a whole. The younger poets started breaking away
from the "school" of Dryden and Pope, even though some poets, like
Churchill and Dr. Johnson, still elected to remain in the old groove. There
were very few poets, indeed, who set themselves completely free from the old
traditional influences. Most of them are, as it were, like Mr. Facing both
ways, looking simultaneously at the neoclassical past and the romantic future.
They seem to be
Plac'd on this isthmus of a middle state.
In the selection of subjects for poetic
treatment, in the choice of verse patterns, and in the manner of treatment we
meet with perceptible changes from the conventions of the Popean school. Those
eighteenth-century poets who show some elements associated with romanticism,
while not altogether ignoring the old conventions, are called transitional
poets or the precursors of the Romantic Revival.
Characteristic of Transitional Period
·
Poetry was no
longer concerned with “Wit” but with simple feelings and nature
·
Poetry was pervaded
by or melancholic tone and was often associated with a meditation on death.
·
Poets were
melancholic and seek for solitude, their thoughts were directed towards death,
or the fear of death, suicide, and graves.
List of
Transitional Poets
I.
Robert Burns
II.
James Thomson
III.
Oliver Goldsmith
IV.
Thomas Gray
V.
William Collins
VI.
William Cowper
VII.
William Blake
VIII.
George Crabbe
Let us sum up the romantic qualities of the poetry of these
transitional poets.
·
These
poets believe in what Victor Hugo describes as "liberalism in
literature". Not much worried about rules and conventions, they believe in
individual poetic inspiration.
·
Their
poetry is not altogether intellectual in content and treatment. Passion,
emotion, and the imagination are valued by them above the cold light of
intellectuality. They naturally return to the lyric.
·
They
have, to quote Hudson, "a love of the wild, fantastic, abnormal, and
supernatural."
·
They
show a new appreciation of the world of Nature which the neoclassical poetry
had mostly neglected. Their poetry is no longer "drawing-room
poetry." They do not limit their attention to urban life and manners only,
as Pope almost always did.
·
They
place more importance on the individual than on society. In them, therefore, is
to be seen at work a stronger democratic spirit, a greater concern for the
oppressed and the poor, and a greater emphasis on individualism in poetry, in
society, everywhere. Their poetry becomes much more subjective.
·
They
show a much greater interest in the Middle Ages which Dryden and Pope had
neglected on account on their alleged barbarousness. Dryden and Pope admired
the Renaissance much more and had many a spiritual link with it.
·
Lastly, there is a strong reaction against the
heroic couplet as the only eligible verse unit. They make experiments with new
measures and stanzaic forms. It is said that every hero ends as a bore. The
same was the case with the heroic couplet.
While exhibiting all these above-listed
tendencies in their poetic works, the transitional poets are not, however,
altogether free from Popean influences. That is exactly why they are not
full-fledged romantics but only "transitional" poets. Nevertheless,
their work proves: "The eighteenth century was an age of reason but the
channels of Romanticism were never dry."
Let us now consider the work of the most
important of the transitional poets of the eighteenth century.
James Thomson (1700-48):
He is a typical transitional poet,
though he chronologically belongs to the first half of the eighteenth century.
Though he was contemporaneous with Pope yet he broke away from the traditions
of his school to explore "fresh woods and pastures new." He bade goodbye
to the heroic couplet and expressed himself in other verse-Treasures—blank
verse and the Spenserian stanza. He would have acknowledged Spenser and Milton
as his guides rather than Dryden and Pope. His Seasons (1726-30) is important
for accurate and sympathetic descriptions of natural scenes. It is entirely
different from such poems as Pope's Windsor Forest on account of the poet's
firsthand knowledge of what he is describing and his intimate rapport with it.
The poem is in blank verse written obviously after the manner of Milton', but
sometimes it seems to be over-strained, "always laboring uphill," in
the words of Hazlitt. Thomson's Liberty is a very long poem. In it Liberty
herself is made to narrate her chequeredcareer through the ages in Greece,
Rome, and England. The theme is dull and abstract, the narration uninteresting,
and the blank verse ponderous. His Castle of Indolence (1748) is in Spenserian
stanzas, and it captures much of the luxuriant, imaginative color of the
Elizabethan poet. As a critic puts it, for languid suggestiveness, in dulcet
and harmonious versification, and "for subtly woven vowel music it need
not shirk comparison with the best of Spenser himself." Thomson looks
forward to the romantics in his interest in nature, in treating of new
subjects, his strong imagination, and his giving up of the heroic couplet. But
he is capable of some very egregious examples of poetic diction. Even Dr.
Johnson was constrained to observe: "His diction is in the highest degree
florid and luxuriant. It is too exuberant and sometimes may be charged with
filling the ear more than the mind.
Oliver Goldsmith (1728-74):
Goldsmith was as friendly with Dr.
Johnson had been with Pope, but that did not curb the individual genius of
either. Goldsmith was as essentially a conservative in literary theory as Dr.
Johnson of whose "Club" he was an eminent member. Both of his
important poems, The Traveller (1764) and The Deserted Village (1770) are in
heroic couplets. The first poem is, didactic (after Johnson's visual practice)
and is concerned with the description and criticism of the places and people in
Europe which Goldsmith had visited as a tramp. The second poem is rich in
natural descriptions and is vibrant with a peculiar note of sentiment and
melancholy which foreshadows nineteenth-century romantics. As in the first
poem, Goldsmith exhibits the tenderness of his feelings for poor villagers.
Thomas Percy (1728-1811):
Percy is known in the history of English
literature not for original poetry but for his compilation of ballads, sonnets,
historical songs, and metrical romances which he published in 1765 under the
title Reliques of Ancient English Poetry. The work .did a lot to revive public
interest in that kind of poetry which had gone out of vogue in the age of
Dryden and Pope. The book contained poetry from different ages-from the middle
Ages to the reign of Charles. The work had a tremendous and lasting popularity.
About its influence on the poets who were to come, we may quote Wordsworth:
"I do not think that there is an able writer in verse of the present day
who would not be proud to acknowledge his obligation to the Reliques."
Even Dr. Johnson favored Percy's venture and earned his thanks by lending him a
hand in the compilation.
Thomas Chatterton (1752-70):
Chatterton is referred to by Wordsworth
in his poem Resolution and Independence as
The marvelous
boy
The sleepless soul that perished in his
pride.
Chatterton, indeed, was a "marvelous
boy" who shot into fame, and then, before he was eighteen, poisoned
himself with arsenic getting sick of his poverty. Some of his poems are quite
Augustan in their matter and from but the most characteristic poems are the
ones he published as the work of Thomas Rowley, a fifteenth-century monk who
lived in Bristol, Chatterton’s native place. Chatterton gave out that he had
discovered them in a box lying in a Bristol church. His hoax was soon seen
through, but that does not detract from the merit of the Rowley poems. The
poems like Aella and the Ballad of Charity are, according to Hudson, quite
remarkable for two reasons-'because they are probably the most wonderful things
ever written by a boy of Chatterton's age, and because they are another clear
indication of the fast growing curiosity of critics and the public regarding
everything belonging to the middle ages." Chatterton's work considerably
influenced the romantic poets-who were intensely interested in everything
medieval.
James Macpherson (1736-96):
He was another forgerer like Chatterton,
though his work was not altogether baseless. He first achieved fame with
Fragments of Ancient Poetry Collected in the Highlands of Scotland and
translated from the Gaelic or Erse Language which were given out to be "genuine
remains of ancient Scottish poetry." Later he produced Fingal, an Epic
Poem in six books(1762), and then Temora, an Epic Poem in eight books (1763).
Macpherson asserted ttyat these two poems were the genuine work of a Gaelic
bard of the third century, names Ossian and that he had given their literal
translation in prose. His claims.provoked an acrimonious controversy as to
their genuineness. "Fortunately," says Hudson, "we need not
enter into the discussion in order to appreciate the epoch-making character of
Macpherson's work. In the loosely rhythmical prose which he adopted for his
so-called translations he carried to an extreme the formal reaction of the time
against the classic couplet. In matter and spirit he is wildly romantic."
His poems transport the reader to a new world of heroism and super-naturalism
tinged with melancholy, a world which is altogether different from the spruce
and reasonable world of Pope.
Thomas Gray (1716-71):
Gray was one of the most learned men of
the Europe of his day. He was also a genuine poet but his poetic production is
lamentably small-just a few odes, some miscellaneous poems, and the Elegy. He
started his career as a strait-jacketed classicist and ended as a genuine
romantic. His work, according to Hudson, is "a kind of epitome of the
changes which were coming over the literature of his time." His first
attempts, The Alliance of Education and Government and the ode On a Distant
Prospect of Eton College were classical in spirit, and the first mentioned, even
in its use of the heroic couplet. Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard is
Gray's finest poem which earned him the praise of even Johnson who condemned
most of Gray's poetry. Hudson observes about this poem: "There is, first,
the use of nature, which though employed only as a background, is still handled
with fidelity and sympathy i There is, next, the churchyard scene, the twilight
atmosphere, and the brooding melancholy of the poem, which at once connect
it...with one side of the romantic movement-the development of the distinctive
romantic mood. The contrast drawn between the country and the town the
peasant's simple life and 'the madding crowd's ignoble strife'-is a third
particular which will be noted. Finally, in the tender feeling shown for 'the
rude forefathers of the hamlet' and the sense of the human value of the little
things that are written 'in the short and simple annals of the poor', we see
poetry, under the influence of the spreading democratic spirit reaching out to
include humble aspects of life hitherto ignored." Gray's next poems, The
Progress of Poesy and The Bard, present a new conception of the poet not as a
clever versifier but a genuinely inspired and prophetic genius. His last poems
like The Fatal Sisters and The Descent of Odin are romantic fragments with
which we step out of the eighteenth century and find ourselves in the full
stream of romanticism.
William Collins (1721-59):
Collin's work is as thin in bulk as
Gray's-it does not extend too much more than 1500 lines. He combines in himself
the neoclassic and romantic elements, though he is not without a specific
manner which is all his own. On the one hand, he provides numerous examples of
poetic diction at its worst, and, on the other, he delights in the highly
romantic world of shadows and the supernatural. His Ode on the Popular Superstations
of the Highlands foreshadows the world in which Coleridge delighted. He is
chiefly known for his odes. To Liberty and the one mentioned above are the
lengthiest of Collins' odes, but he is at his best in shorter flights. He is
exquisite when he eschews poetic diction without losing his delightful singing
quality. Referring to Collins, Swinburne maintains that in "purity of
music" and "clarity of style" there is "no parallel in
English verse from the death of Marvell to the birth of William Blake."
William Cowper (1731-1800):
"He", says Compton-Rickets,
"is a blend of the old and the new, with much of the form of the old and
something of the spirit of the new. In his satires he imitated the manner of
Pope, but his greatest poem The Task is all his own. It is written in blank
verse and contains the famous line:
God made the country and manmade the
town
Which indicates his love of Nature and
simplicity? However, the classical element in him is more predominant than the
romantic. Compton-Rickett maintains: "We shall find in his work neither
the passion nor the strangeness of the Romantic school. Much in his nature
disposed to shape him as a poet of Classicism, and with occasional reserves he
is far more of a classical poet than a romantic. Yet throughout Cowper's work
we feel from time to time a note of something that is certainly not the note of
Pope or Dryden, something deeper in feeling that meets us even in Thomson,
Collins, or Gray. There is a tenderness in poems like My Mother's Picture, that
not even Goldsmith in his verse can quite equal; while his fresh and intimate
nature pictures point to a stage in the development of poetic naturalism, more
considerable than we find in Thomson and his immediate succesors."
George Crabbe (1754-1832):
He mostly continued the neoclassic
tradition and was derisively dubbed as "a Pope in worsted stockings."
In his poetry, which is mostly descriptive of the miseries of poor villagers,
he was an uncompromising unromantic realist. He asserted
I paint the Cot
As Truth will paint it, and as Bards
will not.
He showed much concern for villagers,
but he left for Wordsworth to glorify their simplicity and, even, penury. Crabbe's
excessive, boldness as a realist alienates him from the polish of the
neoclassic school. However, he tenaciously adhered to the heroic couplet, even
when he was a contemporary of Blake and the romantic poets.
Robert Burns (1759-95):
He was a Scottish peasant who took to
poetry and became the truly national poet of Scotland. His work Poems Chiefly
in the Scottish Dialect (1786) sky-rocketed him to fame. All these poems are
imbued with the spirit of romantic lyricism in its untutored spontaneity, humors,
pathos and sympathy with nature and her lowly creatures including the sons of
the soil. Sometimes indeed Bums tries to write in the "correct"
manner of the Popean school but then he becomes unimpressive and insipid. A
critic observes : "Burns was a real peasant who drove the plough as he
hummed his songs, and who knew all the wretchedness and joys and sorrows of the
countryman's life. Sincerity and passion are the chief keys of his verse. Burns
can utter a piercing lyric cry as in A Fond Kiss and then we Sever, can be
gracefully sentimental as in My love is like a Red, Red Rose, can be coarsely
witty as in The Jolly Beggars, but he is always sincere and passionate, and
that is why his words go straight into the heart." A bum was influenced a
great deal by the spirit of the French Revolution. His fellow-feeling extended
even to the lower animals that he studied minutely and treated sympathetically.
William Blake (1757-1827):
Blake was an out and out rebel against
all the social, political, and literary conventions of the eighteenth century.
It is with considerable inaccuracy that he can be included among the
transitional poets or the precursors of the Romantic Revival, as in many ways
he is even more romantic than the romantic poets! The most undisciplined and
the loneliest of all poets, he lived in his own world peopled by phantoms and
spectres that he treated as more real than the humdrum realities of the
physical world. His glorification of childhood and feeling for nature make him
akin to the romantic poets. He is best known for his three thin
volumes-Poetical Sketches (1783), Songs of Innocence (1789), and Songs of
Experience (1794), which contain some of the most orient gems of English
lyricism. A critic observes: "His passion for freedom was, also, akin to
that which moved Wordsworth, Coleridge and Southey in their earlier years,
though in its later form, it came nearer to Shelley's revolt against
convention. There is, indeed, an unusual degree of fellowship between these
two: the imagery and symbolism, as well as the underlying spirit, of The Revolt
of Islam, Alastor and Prometheus Unbound find their nearest parallel in Blake's
prophetic books. Both had visions of a world regenerated by a gospel of
universal brotherhood, transcending law."
Gray, Burns, and Blake: The Transitional
Poets
It was the mid-eighteenth century and
poets were tiring of the neoclassical ideals of reason and wit. The Neoclassic
poets, such as Alexander Pope, "prized order, clarity, economic wording,
logic, refinement, and decorum. Theirs was an age of rationalism, wit, and
satire." (Guth 1836) This contrasts greatly with the ideal of Romanticism,
which was "an artistic revolt against the conventions of the fashionable
formal, civilized, and refined Neoclassicism of the eighteenth century."
(Guth 1840) Poets like William, "dropped conventional poetic diction and
forms in favor of freer forms and bolder language. They preached a return to
nature, elevated sincere feeling over dry intellect, and often shared in the
revolutionary fervor of the late eighteenth century." (Guth 589) Poets
wanted to express emotion again. They wanted to leave the city far behind and
travel back to the simple countryside where rustic, humble men and women
resided and became their subjects. These poets, William Blake, Thomas Gray, and
Robert Burns, caught in the middle of neoclassic writing and the Romantic Age,
are fittingly known as the Transitional poets.
Thomas Gray transitioned these phases
nicely; he kept "what he believed was good in the old, neoclassic
tradition" ("Adventures" 442) but adventured forth into
"unfamiliar areas in poetry." In particular, Gray brought back to
life the use of the first-person singular, for example "One morn I missed
him on the customed hill…" ("Elegy Written in a Country
Churchyard", p. 433, line 109) which had been "considered a barbarism
by eighteenth century norm." (431) Thomas Gray’s poem Elegy Written in a
Country Churchyard is a wonderful example of natural settings in transitional
poetry. It "reflects on the lives of common, unknown, rustic men and
women, in terms of both what their lives were and what they might have
been". ("English" 268) Gray is unafraid to see the poor, and
emotionally illustrates how death affects their life: "For them no more
the blazing hearth shall burn, / Or busy housewife ply her evening care: / No
children run to lisp their sire’s return…."
However, humble settings were also
readily used by Robert Burns, a Scottish poet "frequently counted wholly
as a romantic poet" ("English" 281), but who’s work often makes
him a more transitional as it incorporates both neoclassical and romantic verse
ideals. To a Mouse, also takes place in the country, and this time the humble
subject is not a man, but a lowly mouse. Using such terms as
"beastie" and "Mousie" results in an affectionate tone, as
the human species is emotionally weighed up against "Mousie’s" life.
A common ground is found when the poet notes that "the best laid scheme o’
mice an’ men/ Gang aft agley, / an’ lea’s us nougat but grief an’ pain".
This public display of emotion, such as the affection and concern for the
mouse, as well as a depressing revelation that life can go wrong for all, would
have been surprising to pre-romanticism readers. One of Burns most significant
influences though, was his use of Scottish dialect to write his poems; it was
"a great departure from the elegant and artificial diction of
eighteenth-century poetry." ("Adventures" 441) His use of
dialect gave the reader a sense of connection to the common man and the humble
subjects of this poetry. It created a rawer, more real mood that would have
been lost in the ornamental heroic couplets used by the neoclassic writers.
William Blake is, however, arguably the
most important transitional poet. As a poet he did away with the common
standards of "rationality and restraint" (Guth 589), instead favoring
to write using "bold, unusual symbols to elaborate the divine energies at
work in the universe" in poems such as The Tyger. This poem makes use of
an awe-inspiring mood, coupled with deeply universal concerns and experiences.
In this case, the tiger is a symbol of the evil in mankind, and the heavy
knowledge of experience that is brought with adulthood. His poems also made
great use of repetition and parallelism, sometimes to gain the effect of a
nursery rhyme, simple soft and sweet, as read in The Lamb: "Little Lamb
God bless thee, / Little Lamb God bless thee." However, the same device
also emphasizes the rhetorical nature of his famous question "Tyger…what
immortal hand or eye, / could frame thy fearful symmetry?" which makes up
both the first and last stanza of The Tyger.
The transitional poets were no longer
afraid to feel and were brave men who put their hearts on paper for all to see.
They expressed a simple affection for uncomplicated country life, and used such
settings to make profound comments on mankind in general, death, and religion.
These poets idealized the humble man, the country setting, and universal
truths. It is fitting to call Gray, Burns and Blake adventurers, whose guides
to new lands were their pens. They dared change through the use of
unconventional devices, such as dialect, the invocation of emotions, and the
egotistic use of the first person singular. These changes in verse, and the
subsequent popularity, and admiration received from the public, for Gray and
Burns (Blake was not appreciated until the next century) and their transitional
poetry marked the beginning of the end of Neoclassicism. Now, these three poets
having forged the way, it was time for the Romantics to follow.
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