Romantic Poetry Study Guide
Romantic Poetry Study Guide
Romantic Poetry Study Guide
Page 717
Some Basic characteristics of Romanticism are
nature
examination of inner feelings, emotions, and imagination
concerned with the individual
interested in the mysterious and supernatural
1.
2.
3.
4.
23. According to Burns, what about the louse would make its presence on a flannen toy
(line 32) or a bit duddie boy line 33) more appropriate?
24. Paraphrase lines 37-40. How has the speakers attitude changed from what weve seen in
previous stanzas? Why does he advise Jenny dinna toss your head?
25. How does the addressee of Burnss apostrophe (when a speaker directly addresses an
absent or dead person, an abstract quality, or something nonhuman as if it were present
and capable of responding) change over the course of the poem?
26. What is Burnss underlying theme, or insight into life, in To a Louse? Is his main focus
the louse or the lady? Explain.
Questions on both Burns poems
27. What is the speakers tone in To a Louse? How does it differ from the speakers tone
in To a Mouse?
28. Which of the louses characteristics does the speaker mock? Which of the mouses
characteristics does the speaker praise?
29. In To a Mouse and To a Louse, the speaker addresses two creatures that most people
notice with disgust or alarm. Why and how does he come to appreciate these creatures?
30. How does Burns use dialect in these poems to convey strong emotions and to create
memorable images?
31. The speaker is the imaginary voice assumed by the author of a poem. What does the
speakers response to plowing over a mouses nest reveal about him?
32. How does Burns use his imagination to learn about life from even the smallest of
creatures?
Pages 728-729 William Blake
1. Why wasnt Blakes life particularly romantic compared to those of Coleridge, Shelley,
and Keats?
2. What job did he begin at the age of fourteen that he continued throughout his long life?
3. Who illustrated and printed much of his poetry?
4. When was Songs of Innocence published? When was Songs of Experience published?
What, when published together in one volume, did Blake promise a demonstration of?
5. Describe Blakes idea of Innocence.
6. Describe Blakes idea of Experience.
Page 732 The Lamb by William Blake
7. From which collection is this poem taken?
8. What does the creator of the lamb do for his creation in the first stanza of the poem?
9. The word He is defined in the footnotes. What context clues in the poem help you
confirm the definition given?
10. Where in the second stanza does Blake make explicit the Christian symbolism of this
poem? Why is this person called a lamb?
11. What are you told directly about the speaker of The Lamb? What inferences can you
draw from this information?
Page 731 The Tyger by William Blake
12. From which collection is this poem taken?
13. What question does the speaker of The Tyger ask repeatedly? What answer is implied?
14. The last stanza of The Tyger is almost identical to the first. What is the significance of
the one word changed in the last stanza?
15. Where in the poem does the speaker wonder if the tiger may have been created by God?
What imagery tells us that the speaker also suspects that the tiger could be a demonic
16.
17.
18.
19.
creation? List the images that suggest a human creator like a blacksmith or a
goldsmith.
Notice that Blake does not use the normal spelling of the word tiger. What other clues
can you find that hint at the tigers extraordinary nature?
Think about what the lamb symbolizes, and then restate line 20 in your own words. What
might the speaker be implying by this question?
The tiger may symbolize, among other things, a revolutionary energy that can disturb but
also transform society. Identify imagery that associates the tiger both with enlightenment
and with revolutionary violence.
How does The Tyger represent peoples attraction toward and repulsion from evil?
19. Why does the speaker yearn to re-create the damsels symphony and song within
himself?
20. What does the imagery in lines 14-1 convey? Contrast this impression with that
conveyed in lines 1-13. What phrases does Coleridge use to differentiate between the
two places?
21. Many ancient cultures revered poets as seers who had a special relationship with the
gods. How might the last stanza allude to this belief?
22. How could this poem itself be about the act of creating a poem?
23. In your opinion, does this poem celebrate the imagination or caution against its
indulgence? Support your answer with evidence from the poem.
24. A symbol is a person, place, or thin, or event that stands both for itself and for something
beyond itself. What might the dome in the air that the speaker wants to create
symbolize?
Pages 810-811 George Gordon, Lord Byron
1. When did Byron become a celebrity and why?
2. When did Byrons writing life begin in earnest?
3. How did Byron die? How old was he?
4. What is a simile?
Page 812 She Walks in Beauty by Lord Byron
5. What is being compared in this poem? Why would these two things be linked?
6. In the first line, the speaker uses simile, declaring that the beautiful woman he admires is
like the night. How does the speaker extend the simile as the stanza continues?
7. How does the womans beauty affect the speaker?
8. The words dark and bright in line 3 of the poem suggest a balance of opposites. How
is this idea developed in the poem?
9. Explain the simile in the first stanza of the poem and the emotions it evokes.
10. The repetition of consonant sounds in words that are close to one another is alliteration.
Identify an example of alliteration, and analyze its effect.
Page 818 Percy Bysshe Shelley
1. What did Shelley believe about human thought and expression?
2. What happened to Shelleys first wife?
3. Who was his second wife? What did she write?
4. What brought Shelley together with Byron?
5. How did Shelley die?
19. Whom does the speaker address? What line tells you this?
20. In standard English, modifiers are placed close to the words they modify or describe.
How would you reverse the words in line 10 so that the adverb more is close to the word
it modifies? What effect does this change have on the poem?
21. What do the image in When I Have Fears make you visualize? What feeling is created
by the image in the final two lines?
22. What ideas are presented in the quatrains? How does the couplet sum up the speakers
point?
23. The writers attitude toward the reader or subject is called tone. Describe the tone in
When I Have Fears. Does it change? Explain.