Monday, October 18, 2010

Symbol in English Literature

A symbol is something which represents something else, often an idea or quality, by analogy. It may be conventional, private or extended. White, Lion, and rose commonly symbolize innocence, courage, and beauty. Such symbols exist by convention and tradition. A snake may stand for evil or wisdom, according to different conventions. Writers either use these conventional symbols or invent their own which are private symbols. Blake and Shelley, use both conventional and private symbols in their poetry. However, novelists also use symbols.

A symbol may be seen as a species of metaphor in which the exact subject is not explicit and may even be mysterious. A whole poem may be a symbol of this kind. Blake's The Stick Rose" is typical. Blake's children in his poems are symbol of innocence, Shelley's "West Wind" is a symbol of destroyer and preserver.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Allegory in English Literature

Allegory has been derived from a Greek term "allos" meaning "disguise". So allegory suggests to describe a thing under disguise of another thing. It is an extended narrative in prose or poetry that delineates a story which has an inner meaning.

We can distinguish two main types: Historical and Political allegory, in which the characters and actions represent, or allegorize historical events, and the other one is, the Allegory of ideas, in which the literal characters represent abstract concepts and the plot exemplifies a doctrine or thesis. Another type of allegory symbolizes any religious issue. For example, Coleridge's "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" is a Christian allegory of guilt and redemption.

John Keats makes a subtle use of allegory throughout his ode, "To Autumn", most explicitly in the second stanza, which represents autumn personified as a female figure and the scenes and the activities of the harvest season. Thus, allegory is a powerful literary figure of speech used by the skillful writer to give a moral, religious, or satirical meaning.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Romanticism in English Literature

Romanticism can be termed as a literary movement which is a protest against the Neo-classic poetic ideals. This movement starts with the publication of Wordsworth and Coleridge's lyrical Ballads. It prefers emotions and imagination to reason or intellect. C.H. Herford says, "Romanticism is the extra-ordinary development of imaginative sensibility." Another eminent critic says, " One poet is romantic because he falls in love; another romantic because he sees a ghost; another romantic because he hears a cuckoo." It is an unconventional and revolutionary theme. It has a high regard for nature and subjectivity. The subjectivity is at the root of sensuousness, Hellenism, escapism, allegory, pantheism, mysticism, and many other figures of speech. According to Wordsworth, “Poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful imagination recollected in tranquility." This definition highlights the main traits of romanticism- the flow of imagination, high tone of subjectivity, robust individualism, and less care for the rules.