Romantics Existentialism
Romantics Existentialism
Romantics Existentialism
Pradip Mondal
After the publication of his seminal essay “Tradition and the Individual Talent”,
Eliot’s theory of poetry has influenced in a large way the objective and subjective lyrics
written after 1919. The obvious turn has been to bridle the direct emotional surge and to
economize the expression even when the narrator’s persona is obvious. Some of the
leading American poets, whose creative period fell between 1920 and 1960, have drifted
away from the extreme kind of impersonality and economy. Generally speaking, Modern
poetry is very carefully constructed by the elimination of Romantic emotion and feeling.
The usual motive is to suppress emotion and sentiment, to arrive at some direct, intimate
and essential truth. Alongside these very clear tendencies in modernist poetry, there
modern economical verse is found to be mixed up with deep strains of nostalgia, love of
nature and various emotional themes, which create a new pattern in modern verse.
Interestingly, while much has been written on the Romanticism of Yeats the Modern
poet, some of the American Modern poets retaining the Romantic spirit have been
insufficiently treated as the ‘Modern Romantics’ or the ‘Romantic Moderns’. Such were
Roethke (1908-1963). Roethke’s first book Open House (1941) shows the influence of
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Yeats, especially in its rhythms, an influence that would stay with Roethke for his whole
life. Some examples will prove the mixed sensation in their poems. Here is a
Camus in his philosophical book The Myth of Sisyphus (1942) explains that Sisyphus
is to be seen as hopeless, but for that very reason as an absurd hero. His moment of
suffering is his moment of consciousness. Happiness and the awareness of absurdity are
the two sons of the same mother earth. Camus believes that men, who are fighting
together against a common evil, even though they are fighting a losing battle, can give
In Being and Nothingness (1943), Jean Paul Sartre talks about the importance of the
role of choice and the choice of roles in the modern world where God is
dead/murdered/irrelevant and the people are without solace. The three poets, selected for
my exploration, seem to follow this notion. Here we find a great difference between these
modern American Romantics and their European counterparts, especially the British
poets to whom we ascribe the term ‘Romantics’. In Shelley, Byron, Keats and even in
Southey, Coleridge and Wordsworth we find that obvious note of escape from the
contemporary situation. To avoid the naked reality, some tried to look at the distant past;
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some looked to the distant future; some, again, took solace in the lap of Mother Nature;
I find that Williams, Jeffers and Roethke were directly or indirectly influenced by
ideas of Camus, Sartre, Nietzsche, and Kierkegaard. For the sensitive mind which is at
the same time susceptible to the broad spectrum of human emotions, it is painful to
accept the silence of the universe. Since man has a life to live and to be able to relish it
also, he tries to find meaning out of his existence but the universe remains resolutely
silent/neutral. This is the ‘absurdite’ Camus talks about and this is the particular problem
felt by each of the poets. In order to find a meaning, to impose one’s own meaning into
Living in an age where traditions are being challenged with the gradual collapse of
orthodox religious and moral codes, the quest for meaning and the existential angst have
been inevitable outcome. In the modern era the existential crisis has been acute, and an
escape route is not easy to find. The escape which was possible for the 19th century
Romantics has proved impossible for these Modern Romantics. Facing the situation,
finding beauty as a vital component of poetry and a tendency to probe deep into one’s
own self, namely, introspection—these are, respectively, have been the prerogatives of
The tradition might have taken shape in America with the example of Robert Frost ─
with his ambivalent gesture and stark pessimism expressed in controlled blank verse and
his unfailing eye on the New England landscapes. Jeffers’s tone is not far from Frost’s in
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many of his poems, which project the modern poet’s restraint exercised on the Romantic
idiom:
Roethke’s pessimism comes out in a queer gesture of irony and the psychological
complexity is more acute in him than in Jeffers and Williams. All of them, however,
[“The Waking”]
Not to escape from the situation but to face it, to find beauty in it, has been the pre-
Wordsworth and the Bengali poet Jibanananda: trying to find beauty in the
commonplace, even in horrid things. One poem by Jeffers can clarify this:
To feel and speak the astonishing beauty of things—earth, stone and water,
The bloodshot beauty of human nature, its thoughts, frenzies and human passions.
“Paterson is a pre-epic, showing that the process of disintegration releases forces that can
build a new world. It confronts, again and again, the savagery of contemporary society,
but still affirms a creative seed. Eliot’s end is Williams’ beginning.” Though Williams
insists upon true language and poems springing from situations, a close look at his poems
reveals that they are generally constructed upon an unstated, unconscious mythic pattern.
In “Asphodel, That Greeny Flower”, Williams asserts: “Only the imagination is real! / I
have declared it/ time without end.” Each of his poems is a fragment of the fluidic
imaginative world in which we all live and dream, distinct from but coterminous with the
actual world. In the poems in Spring and All (1923), consciousness and the world
permeate each other. Subject and object are fused, and oppositions disappear between the
inner world of the self and the outer world of things. This is Williams’s central post-
Romantic break-through.
The existential crisis of modern man has usually been expressed in a minimalistic
manner in modern poetry. However, these three poets project the crisis in an obviously
Romantic idiom, which is not superabundant like Shelley’s or Keats’s, but quiet and
release, is very much there characteristically as in many other Modern American poets.
For Jeffers, politics, salvation on earth and the whole ideological war of Right and Left
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were execrable. Man, he claimed, as though washing his hands of the entire matter, was a
“spectral episode” in the scheme of things. But instead of ugliness, we see loveliness in
But, I think that critical works on these three poets are inadequate, as these do not
focus on the poets’ handling of Romanticism and Existentialism at the same time in their
poetry. They somehow missed the point in trying to show how these poets tried to
discover a way of escape to an optimistic plane in spite of living amidst existential angst
in the post-World War scenario. The critical commentaries on these three poets are
inadequate for fathoming the full meanings in their poetry. Even when plunged in deep
existential angst and trauma, these poets expressed their feelings with an obvious
Romantic trait. So I think that there is enough scope for exploring how they grappled
with the existential crisis in their poetry that are tinged with the Romantic passion.
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 3: The New Romantic William Carlos Williams: Reading His Poetry through
Chapter 5: Quest for Identity Standing on the Edge of an Abyss: Reading Theodore
Chapter 6 Conclusion
Works Consulted:
Belle, La Jenijoy. The Echoing Wood of Theodore Roethke. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton
Breslin, James E. William Carlos Williams: An American Artist. Oxford and New York:
Butler, Marilyn. Romantics, Rebels and Reactionaries: English Literature and Its
Background: 1760-1830. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 1981.
Print.
Everson, William. Robinson Jeffers: Fragments of an Older Fury. Berkeley. Calif: Oyez
Hass, Robert, John Hollander, Carolyn Kaizer, Nathaniel Mackey, and Marjorie Perloff,
eds. American Poetry: The Twentieth Century, (a) Volume One: Henry Adams to
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Dorothy Parker; (b) Volume Two: E. E. Cummings to May Swenson. New York:
Jarrell, Randall. Poetry and the Age. New York: Knopf, 1953. Print.
Litz, A. Walter and Christopher MacGowan, eds. The Collected Poetry of William Carlos
Williams, (a) Volume 1: 1909-1939; (b) Volume 2: 1939-1962. New York: New
Longenbach, James. Modern Poetry after Modernism. Oxford: Oxford University Press,
1997. Print.
Mariani, Paul. William Carlos Williams: A New World Naked. New York: Mc Graw-Hill,
1981. Print.
Mazzaro, Jerome. William Carlos Williams: The Later Poems. Ithaca and London:
Myers, Jack and David Wojahn, eds. Twentieth-Century American Poetry. Illinois:
Nolte, William Henry. Rock and Hawk: Robinson Jeffers and the Romantic Agony.
Powell, Lawrence C. Robinson Jeffers: The Man and His Work. New York: Haskell
Roe, Nicholas, ed. Romanticism: An Oxford Guide. Oxford and New York: Oxford
Spears, Monroe K. Dionysus and the City: Modernism in Twentieth century Poetry.
Townley, Rod. The Early Poetry of William Carlos Williams. Ithaca and London: Cornell
Zaller, Robert. The Cliffs of Solitude: A Reading of Robinson Jeffers. New York:
---. Robinson Jeffers and the American Sublime. Stanford, California: Stanford