Romantic ideas centered around art as inspiration, the spiritual and
aesthetic dimension of nature, and metaphors of organic growth. Art,
rather than science, Romantics argued, could best express universal truth.
The Romantics underscored the importance of expressive art for the
individual and society. In his essay "The Poet" (1844), Ralph
Waldo Emerson, perhaps the most influential writer of the Romantic era,
asserts:
The development of the self became a major theme; self-awareness a
primary method. If, according to Romantic theory, self and nature were
one, self-awareness was not a selfish dead end but a mode of knowledge
opening up the universe. If one's self were one with all humanity, then
the individual had a moral duty to reform social inequalities and relieve
human suffering. The idea of "self" -- which suggested
selfishness to earlier generations -- was redefined. New compound words
with positive meanings emerged: "self-realization,"
"self-expression," "self-reliance."
As the unique, subjective self became important, so did the realm of
psychology. Exceptional artistic effects and techniques were developed to
evoke heightened psychological states. The "sublime" -- an
effect of beauty in grandeur (for example, a view from a mountaintop) --
produced feelings of awe, reverence, vastness, and a power beyond human
comprehension.
Romanticism was affirmative and appropriate for most American poets and
creative essayists. America's vast mountains, deserts, and tropics
embodied the sublime. The Romantic spirit seemed particularly suited to
American democracy: It stressed individualism, affirmed the value of the
common person, and looked to the inspired imagination for its aesthetic
and ethical values. Certainly the New England Transcendentalists -- Ralph
Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and their associates -- were inspired
to a new optimistic affirmation by the Romantic movement. In New England,
Romanticism fell upon fertile soil.
TRANSCENDENTALISM
The Transcendentalist movement was a
reaction against 18th century rationalism and a manifestation of the
general humanitarian trend of 19th century thought. The movement was based
on a fundamental belief in the unity of the world and God. The soul of
each individual was thought to be identical with the world -- a microcosm
of the world itself. The doctrine of self-reliance and individualism
developed through the belief in the identification of the individual soul
with God.
Transcendentalism was intimately connected with Concord, a small New
England village 32 kilometers west of Boston. Concord was the first inland
settlement of the original Massachusetts Bay Colony. Surrounded by forest,
it was and remains a peaceful town close enough to Boston's lectures,
bookstores, and colleges to be intensely cultivated, but far enough away
to be serene. Concord was the site of the first battle of the American
Revolution, and Ralph Waldo Emerson's poem commemorating the battle,
"Concord Hymn," has one of the most famous opening stanzas in
American literature:
By the rude bridge that arched the flood
Their flag to April's breeze unfurled,
Here once the embattled farmers stood
And fired the shot heard round the world.
Concord was the first rural artist's colony, and the first place to
offer a spiritual and cultural alternative to American materialism. It was
a place of high-minded conversation and simple living (Emerson and Henry
David Thoreau both had vegetable gardens). Emerson, who moved to Concord
in 1834, and Thoreau are most closely associated with the town, but the
locale also attracted the novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne, the feminist
writer Margaret Fuller, the educator (and father of novelist Louisa May
Alcott) Bronson Alcott, and the poet William Ellery Channing. The
Transcendental Club was loosely organized in 1836 and included, at various
times, Emerson, Thoreau, Fuller, Channing, Bronson Alcott, Orestes
Brownson (a leading minister), Theodore Parker (abolitionist and
minister), and others.
The Transcendentalists published a quarterly magazine, The Dial,
which lasted four years and was first edited by Margaret Fuller and later
by Emerson. Reform efforts engaged them as well as literature. A number of
Transcendentalists were abolitionists, and some were involved in
experimental utopian communities such as nearby Brook Farm (described in
Hawthorne's The Blithedale Romance) and Fruitlands.
Unlike many European groups, the Transcendentalists never issued a
manifesto. They insisted on individual differences -- on the unique
viewpoint of the individual. American Transcendental Romantics pushed
radical individualism to the extreme. American writers often saw
themselves as lonely explorers outside society and convention. The
American hero -- like Herman Melville's Captain Ahab, or Mark Twain's Huck
Finn, or Edgar Allan Poe's Arthur Gordon Pym -- typically faced risk, or
even certain destruction, in the pursuit of metaphysical self-discovery.
For the Romantic American writer, nothing was a given. Literary and social
conventions, far from being helpful, were dangerous. There was tremendous
pressure to discover an authentic literary form, content, and voice -- all
at the same time. It is clear from the many masterpieces produced in the
three decades before the U.S. Civil War (1861-65) that American writers
rose to the challenge.
Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)
Ralph Waldo Emerson, the towering figure of his era, had a religious sense
of mission. Although many accused him of subverting Christianity, he
explained that, for him "to be a good minister, it was necessary to
leave the church." The address he delivered in 1838 at his alma
mater, the Harvard Divinity School, made him unwelcome at Harvard for 30
years. In it, Emerson accused the church of acting "as if God were
dead" and of emphasizing dogma while stifling the spirit.
Emerson's philosophy has been called contradictory, and it is true that
he consciously avoided building a logical intellectual system because such
a rational system would have negated his Romantic belief in intuition and
flexibility. In his essay "Self-Reliance," Emerson remarks:
"A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds." Yet he
is remarkably consistent in his call for the birth of American
individualism inspired by nature. Most of his major ideas -- the need for
a new national vision, the use of personal experience, the notion of the
cosmic Over-Soul, and the doctrine of compensation -- are suggested in his
first publication, Nature (1836). This essay opens:
Our age is retrospective. It builds the
sepulchres of the fathers. It writes biographies, histories, criticism.
The foregoing generations beheld God and nature face to face; we,
through their eyes. Why should not we also enjoy an original relation to
the universe? Why should not we have a poetry of insight and not of
tradition, and a religion by revelation to us, and not the history of
theirs. Embosomed for a season in nature, whose floods of life stream
around and through us, and invite us by the powers they supply, to
action proportioned to nature, why should we grope among the dry bones
of the past...? The sun shines today also. There is more wool and flax
in the fields. There are new lands, new men, new thoughts. Let us demand
our own works and laws and worship.
Emerson loved the aphoristic genius of the 16th-century French essayist
Montaigne, and he once told Bronson Alcott that he wanted to write a book
like Montaigne's, "full of fun, poetry, business, divinity,
philosophy, anecdotes, smut." He complained that Alcott's abstract
style omitted "the light that shines on a man's hat, in a child's
spoon."
Spiritual vision and practical, aphoristic expression make Emerson
exhilarating; one of the Concord Transcendentalists aptly compared
listening to him with "going to heaven in a swing." Much of his
spiritual insight comes from his readings in Eastern religion, especially
Hinduism, Confucianism, and Islamic Sufism. For example, his poem
"Brahma" relies on Hindu sources to assert a cosmic order beyond
the limited perception of mortals:
If the red slayer think he slay
Or the slain think he is slain,
They know not well the subtle ways
I keep, and pass, and turn again.
Far or forgot to me is near
Shadow and sunlight are the same;
The vanished gods to me appear;
And one to me are shame and fame.
They reckon ill who leave me out;
When me they fly, I am the wings;
I am the doubter and the doubt,
And I the hymn the Brahmin sings
The strong gods pine for my abode,
And pine in vain the sacred Seven,
But thou, meek lover of the good!
Find me, and turn thy back on heaven.
This poem, published in the first number of the Atlantic Monthly
magazine (1857), confused readers unfamiliar with Brahma, the highest
Hindu god, the eternal and infinite soul of the universe. Emerson had this
advice for his readers: "Tell them to say Jehovah instead of
Brahma."
The British critic Matthew Arnold said the most important writings in
English in the 19th century had been Wordsworth's poems and Emerson's
essays. A great prose-poet, Emerson influenced a long line of American
poets, including Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson, Edwin Arlington Robinson,
Wallace Stevens, Hart Crane, and Robert Frost. He is also credited with
influencing the philosophies of John Dewey, George Santayana, Friedrich
Nietzsche, and William James.
Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)
Henry David Thoreau, of French and Scottish descent, was born in Concord
and made it his permanent home. From a poor family, like Emerson, he
worked his way through Harvard. Throughout his life, he reduced his needs
to the simplest level and managed to live on very little money, thus
maintaining his independence. In essence, he made living his career. A
nonconformist, he attempted to live his life at all times according to his
rigorous principles. This attempt was the subject of many of his writings.
Thoreau's masterpiece, Walden, or Life in the Woods (1854), is
the result of two years, two months, and two days (from 1845 to 1847) he
spent living in a cabin he built at Walden Pond on property owned by
Emerson. In Walden, Thoreau consciously shapes this time into one
year, and the book is carefully constructed so the seasons are subtly
evoked in order. The book also is organized so that the simplest earthly
concerns come first (in the section called "Economy," he
describes the expenses of building a cabin); by the ending, the book has
progressed to meditations on the stars.
In Walden, Thoreau, a lover of travel books and the author of
several, gives us an anti-travel book that paradoxically opens the inner
frontier of self-discovery as no American book had up to this time. As
deceptively modest as Thoreau's ascetic life, it is no less than a guide
to living the classical ideal of the good life. Both poetry and
philosophy, this long poetic essay challenges the reader to examine his or
her life and live it authentically. The building of the cabin, described
in great detail, is a concrete metaphor for the careful building of a
soul. In his journal for January 30, 1852, Thoreau explains his preference
for living rooted in one place: "I am afraid to travel much or to
famous places, lest it might completely dissipate the mind."
Thoreau's method of retreat and concentration resembles Asian
meditation techniques. The resemblance is not accidental: like Emerson and
Whitman, he was influenced by Hindu and Buddhist philosophy. His most
treasured possession was his library of Asian classics, which he shared
with Emerson. His eclectic style draws on Greek and Latin classics and is
crystalline, punning, and as richly metaphorical as the English
metaphysical writers of the late Renaissance.
In Walden, Thoreau not only tests the theories of
Transcendentalism, he re-enacts the collective American experience of the
19th century: living on the frontier. Thoreau felt that his contribution
would be to renew a sense of the wilderness in language. His journal has
an undated entry from 1851:
English literature from the days of the
minstrels to the Lake Poets, Chaucer and Spenser and Shakespeare and
Milton included, breathes no quite fresh and in this sense, wild strain.
It is an essentially tame and civilized literature, reflecting Greece
and Rome. Her wilderness is a greenwood, her wildman a Robin Hood. There
is plenty of genial love of nature in her poets, but not so much of
nature herself. Her chronicles inform us when her wild animals, but not
the wildman in her, became extinct. There was need of America.
Walden inspired William Butler Yeats, a passionate Irish
nationalist, to write "The Lake Isle of Innisfree," while
Thoreau's essay "Civil Disobedience," with its theory of passive
resistance based on the moral necessity for the just individual to disobey
unjust laws, was an inspiration for Mahatma Gandhi's Indian independence
movement and Martin Luther King's struggle for black Americans' civil
rights in the 20th century.
Thoreau is the most attractive of the Transcendentalists today because
of his ecological consciousness, do-it-yourself independence, ethical
commitment to abolitionism, and political theory of civil disobedience and
peaceful resistance. His ideas are still fresh, and his incisive poetic
style and habit of close observation are still modern.
Walt Whitman (1819-1892)
Born on Long Island, New York, Walt Whitman was a part-time carpenter and
man of the people, whose brilliant, innovative work expressed the
country's democratic spirit. Whitman was largely self-taught; he left
school at the age of 11 to go to work, missing the sort of traditional
education that made most American authors respectful imitators of the
English. His Leaves of Grass (1855), which he rewrote and revised
throughout his life, contains "Song of Myself," the most
stunningly original poem ever written by an American. The enthusiastic
praise that Emerson and a few others heaped on this daring volume
confirmed Whitman in his poetic vocation, although the book was not a
popular success.
A visionary book celebrating all creation, Leaves of Grass was
inspired largely by Emerson's writings, especially his essay "The
Poet," which predicted a robust, open-hearted, universal kind of poet
uncannily like Whitman himself. The poem's innovative, unrhymed,
free-verse form, open celebration of sexuality, vibrant democratic
sensibility, and extreme Romantic assertion that the poet's self was one
with the poem, the universe, and the reader permanently altered the course
of American poetry.
Leaves of Grass is as vast, energetic, and natural as the
American continent; it was the epic generations of American critics had
been calling for, although they did not recognize it. Movement ripples
through "Song of Myself" like restless music:
My ties and ballasts leave me...
I skirt sierras, my palms cover continents
I am afoot with my vision.
The poem bulges with myriad concrete sights and sounds. Whitman's birds
are not the conventional "winged spirits" of poetry. His
"yellow-crown'd heron comes to the edge of the marsh at night and
feeds upon small crabs." Whitman seems to project himself into
everything that he sees or imagines. He is mass man, "Voyaging to
every port to dicker and adventure, / Hurrying with the modern crowd as
eager and fickle as any." But he is equally the suffering individual,
"The mother of old, condemn'd for a witch, burnt with dry wood, her
children gazing on....I am the hounded slave, I wince at the bite of the
dogs....I am the mash'd fireman with breast-bone broken...."
More than any other writer, Whitman invented the myth of democratic
America. "The Americans of all nations at any time upon the earth
have probably the fullest poetical nature. The United States is
essentially the greatest poem." When Whitman wrote this, he daringly
turned upside down the general opinion that America was too brash and new
to be poetic. He invented a timeless America of the free imagination,
peopled with pioneering spirits of all nations. D.H. Lawrence, the British
novelist and poet, accurately called him the poet of the "open
road."
Whitman's greatness is visible in many of his poems, among them
"Crossing Brooklyn Ferry," "Out of the Cradle Endlessly
Rocking," and "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd," a
moving elegy on the death of Abraham Lincoln. Another important work is
his long essay "Democratic Vistas" (1871), written during the
unrestrained materialism of industrialism's "Gilded Age." In
this essay, Whitman justly criticizes America for its "mighty,
many-threaded wealth and industry" that mask an underlying "dry
and flat Sahara" of soul. He calls for a new kind of literature to
revive the American population ("Not the book needs so much to be the
complete thing, but the reader of the book does"). Yet ultimately,
Whitman's main claim to immortality lies in "Song of Myself."
Here he places the Romantic self at the center of the consciousness of the
poem:
I celebrate myself, and sing myself,
And what I assume you shall assume,
For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.
Whitman's voice electrifies even modern readers with his proclamation
of the unity and vital force of all creation. He was enormously
innovative. From him spring the poem as autobiography, the American
Everyman as bard, the reader as creator, and the still-contemporary
discovery of "experimental," or organic, form.
THE BRAHMIN POETS
In their time, the Boston Brahmins (as the
patrician, Harvard-educated class came to be called) supplied the most
respected and genuinely cultivated literary arbiters of the United States.
Their lives fitted a pleasant pattern of wealth and leisure directed by
the strong New England work ethic and respect for learning.
In an earlier Puritan age, the Boston Brahmins would have been
ministers; in the 19th century, they became professors, often at Harvard.
Late in life they sometimes became ambassadors or received honorary
degrees from European institutions. Most of them travelled or were
educated in Europe: They were familiar with the ideas and books of
Britain, Germany, and France, and often Italy and Spain. Upper class in
background but democratic in sympathy, the Brahmin poets carried their
genteel, European-oriented views to every section of the United States,
through public lectures at the 3,000 lyceums (centers for public lectures)
and in the pages of two influential Boston magazines, the North
American Review and the Atlantic Monthly.
The writings of the Brahmin poets fused American and European
traditions and sought to create a continuity of shared Atlantic
experience. These scholar-poets attempted to educate and elevate the
general populace by introducing a European dimension to American
literature. Ironically, their overall effect was conservative. By
insisting on European things and forms, they retarded the growth of a
distinctive American consciousness. Well-meaning men, their conservative
backgrounds blinded them to the daring innovativeness of Thoreau, Whitman
(whom they refused to meet socially), and Edgar Allan Poe (whom even
Emerson regarded as the "jingle man"). They were pillars of what
was called the "genteel tradition" that three generations of
American realists had to battle. Partly because of their benign but bland
influence, it was almost 100 years before the distinctive American genius
of Whitman, Melville, Thoreau, and Poe was generally recognized in the
United States.
John Greenleaf Whittier (1807-1892)
John Greenleaf Whittier, the most active poet of the era, had a background
very similar to Walt Whitman's. He was born and raised on a modest Quaker
farm in Massachusetts, had little formal education, and worked as a
journalist. For decades before it became popular, he was an ardent
abolitionist. Whittier is respected for anti-slavery poems such as "Ichabod,"
and his poetry is sometimes viewed as an early example of regional
realism.
Whittier's sharp images, simple constructions, and ballad-like
tetrameter couplets have the simple earthy texture of Robert Burns. His
best work, the long poem "Snow Bound," vividly recreates the
poet's deceased family members and friends as he remembers them from
childhood, huddled cozily around the blazing hearth during one of New
England's blustering snowstorms. This simple, religious, intensely
personal poem, coming after the long nightmare of the Civil War, is an
elegy for the dead and a healing hymn. It affirms the eternity of the
spirit, the timeless power of love in the memory, and the undiminished
beauty of nature, despite violent outer political storms.
Margaret Fuller (1810-1850)
Margaret Fuller, an outstanding essayist, was born and raised in
Cambridge, Massachusetts. From a modest financial background, she was
educated at home by her father (women were not allowed to attend Harvard)
and became a child prodigy in the classics and modern literatures. Her
special passion was German Romantic literature, especially Goethe, whom
she translated.
The first professional woman journalist of note in America, Fuller
wrote influential book reviews and reports on social issues such as the
treatment of women prisoners and the insane. Some of these essays were
published in her book Papers on Literature and Art (1846). A year
earlier, she had her most significant book, Woman in the Nineteenth
Century. It originally had appeared in the Transcendentalist magazine,
The Dial, which she edited from 1840 to 1842.
Fuller's Woman in the Nineteenth Century is the earliest and
most American exploration of women's role in society. Often applying
democratic and Transcendental principles, Fuller thoughtfully analyzes the
numerous subtle causes and evil consequences of sexual discrimination and
suggests positive steps to be taken. Many of her ideas are strikingly
modern. She stresses the importance of "self-dependence," which
women lack because "they are taught to learn their rule from without,
not to unfold it from within."
Fuller is finally not a feminist so much as an activist and reformer
dedicated to the cause of creative human freedom and dignity for all:
...Let us be wise and not impede the
soul....Let us have one creative energy....Let it take what form it
will, and let us not bind it by the past to man or woman, black or
white.
Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)
Emily Dickinson is, in a sense, a link between her era and the literary
sensitivities of the turn of the century. A radical individualist, she was
born and spent her life in Amherst, Massachusetts, a small Calvinist
village. She never married, and she led an unconventional life that was
outwardly uneventful but was full of inner intensity. She loved nature and
found deep inspiration in the birds, animals, plants, and changing seasons
of the New England countryside.
Dickinson spent the latter part of her life as a recluse, due to an
extremely sensitive psyche and possibly to make time for writing (for
stretches of time she wrote about one poem a day). Her day also included
homemaking for her attorney father, a prominent figure in Amherst who
became a member of Congress.
Dickinson was not widely read, but knew the Bible, the works of William
Shakespeare, and works of classical mythology in great depth. These were
her true teachers, for Dickinson was certainly the most solitary literary
figure of her time. That this shy, withdrawn, village woman, almost
unpublished and unknown, created some of the greatest American poetry of
the 19th century has fascinated the public since the 1950s, when her
poetry was rediscovered.
Dickinson's terse, frequently imagistic style is even more modern and
innovative than Whitman's. She never uses two words when one will do, and
combines concrete things with abstract ideas in an almost proverbial,
compressed style. Her best poems have no fat; many mock current
sentimentality, and some are even heretical. She sometimes shows a
terrifying existential awareness. Like Poe, she explores the dark and
hidden part of the mind, dramatizing death and the grave. Yet she also
celebrated simple objects -- a flower, a bee. Her poetry exhibits great
intelligence and often evokes the agonizing paradox of the limits of the
human consciousness trapped in time. She had an excellent sense of humor,
and her range of subjects and treatment is amazingly wide. Her poems are
generally known by the numbers assigned them in Thomas H. Johnson's
standard edition of 1955. They bristle with odd capitalizations and
dashes.
A nonconformist, like Thoreau she often reversed meanings of words and
phrases and used paradox to great effect. From 435:
Much Madness is divinest sense --
To a discerning Eye --
Much Sense -- the starkest Madness --
'Tis the Majority
In this, as All, prevail --
Assent -- and you are sane --
Demur -- you're straightway dangerous
And handled with a chain --
Her wit shines in the following poem (288), which ridicules ambition
and public life:
I'm Nobody! Who are you?
Are you -- Nobody -- Too?
Then there's a pair of us?
Don't tell! they'd advertise -- you
know!
How dreary -- to be -- Somebody!
How public -- like a Frog --
To tell one's name -- the livelong
June --
To an admiring Bog!
Dickinson's 1,775 poems continue to intrigue critics, who often
disagree about them. Some stress her mystical side, some her sensitivity
to nature; many note her odd, exotic appeal. One modern critic, R.P.
Blackmur, comments that Dickinson's poetry sometimes feels as if "a
cat came at us speaking English." Her clean, clear, chiseled poems
are some of the most fascinating and challenging in American literature.