Romantic poetry contrasts with Neoclassical poetry, which was the product of intellect and reason, while Romantic poetry is more the product of emotion. The idea of the sublime was taken up by Immanuel Kant and the Romantic poets including especially William Wordsworth. It is associated with the 1757 treatise by Edmund Burke, though it has earlier roots. The literary concept of the sublime became important in the eighteenth century. Although it is often associated with grandeur, the sublime may also refer to the grotesque or other extraordinary experiences that "take us beyond ourselves.” In literature, it refers to use of language and description that excites thoughts and emotions beyond ordinary experience. The Sublime is considered one of the most important concepts in Romantic poetry. Characteristics of English Romantic poetry The Sublime He was the head(literal) of the Romantic Poetry Age or the Age of Romantic Poetry. However, he had in reality a strong, robust and muscular body. An idealized statue of a Czech man Karel Hynek Mácha (in Petřín Park, Prague) represents him as a slim, tender and perhaps unhealthy boy. In the Western cultural context, romanticism substantially contributed to the idea of what a real poet should look like. Such an attitude reflects what might be called the dominant theme of English Romantic poetry: the filtering of natural emotion through the human mind in order to create meaning. Indeed, Coleridge, in his essay On Poesy or Art, sees art as “the mediatress between, and reconciler of nature and man”. Although many stress the notion of spontaneity in Romantic poetry, the movement was still greatly concerned with the difficulty of composition and of translating these emotions into poetic form. The poems of Lyrical Ballads intentionally re-imagined the way poetry should sound: "By fitting to metrical arrangement a selection of the real language of men," Wordsworth and his English contemporaries, such as Coleridge, John Keats, Percy Shelley, Lord Byron and William Blake, wrote poetry that was meant to boil up from serious, contemplative reflection over the interaction of humans with their environment. I have said before that poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings: it takes its origin in emotion recollected in tranquility: the emotion is contemplated till, by a species of reaction, the tranquility gradually disappears, and an emotion, kindred to that which was before the subject of contemplation, is gradually produced, and does itself actually exist in the mind. In early-19th-century England, the poet William Wordsworth defined his and Samuel Taylor Coleridge's innovative poetry in his Preface to Lyrical Ballads (1798): Main articles: Romantic literature in English, English poetry, and Romantic sonnets
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