In Ways Was Tennyson on Heir to the Romantic Generation? in What Ways Did He Differ from His Predeccessors?

867 Words4 Pages
In ways was Tennyson on heir to the romantic generation? In what ways did he differ from his predecessors? Plan - “June Bracken and Heather”- Agrees uses the Bracken and the Heather to show how he his wife makes him feel. - “The Outcast”- Disagrees uses nature to reflect negative feelings. - “The lotos-eaters”- Disagrees uses nature in a dark and depressing way and is an unusual romantic poem. Tennyson uses Bracken and Heather to reflect how his wife made him feel, this is an example of romanticism because nature is used to represent these feelings. Bracken and Heather are often found in the wild alongside one another this suggests that Tennyson and his wife were always together no matter what, which reinforces the idea of a strong relationship between them. “Bracken so bright” is an example of alteration which is used to highlight the word “bright” when referring to his wife. The word “bright” could represent her purity and in Victorian society a woman had to pure and a virgin before married to avoid social stigma and be a norm in the society, Tennyson has used the Bracken to show that she conformed to this stereotype and was a desirable women of the Victorian Era both to him and society. The bracken being bright could also be pathetic fallacy for how she made him feel, “Bracken so bright and the heather so brown”, Tennyson being the heather creates connotations of him being sad- because brown is a dark colour often associated with a negative feeling of sadness. The Bracken being “bright” implies that she made Tennyson the heather happy and made up for his sadness, she was the happiness in his life and he needed her in his life because without light you can’t see , so she could be seen as guiding and supporting him through life. A caesura is also used after this “and my love together” , therefore the love is seen as more dramatic and real because the
Open Document