Assignment - Victorian Literature





The Pre-Raphaelite Movement as a reaction to pure Victorian Didacticism


Name- Kavisha Alagiya

Paper 6- Victorian Literature

Roll No- 10

Enrollment no.- 2069108420200001


Batch – MA 2019-21

Submitted to - Smt S. B. Gardi Department of English


Contents


1. INTRODUCTION.. 1

2. THE PRE-RAPHAELITE MOVEMENT. 1

3. FEATURES OF PRE-RAPHAELITE MOVEMENT. 3

       a.  ART FOR ART'S SAKE
       b.  RETURN TO MIDDLE AGES. 4
       c.  PICTORIAL ELEMENT. 5
       d.  MELODY. 6

4. CONCLUSION.. 7

5.  WORKS CITED.. 8


                               



INTRODUCTION

“We are not makers of history. We are made by history.”

-Martin Luther King, Jr.

The above-mentioned quote demonstrates that if history is doomed to repeat itself than the early episodes which we were shaped by can be taken as a lesson to understand and act in a rational way. As because it is the history which shapes us as a human being, we somewhat are the product of history. The present situation of India is full of social unrest similarly; the Victorian age of England, in the words of William J. Long was

“THE MODERN PERIOD OF PROGRESS AND UNREST”

Queen Victoria came to the throne in 1837 and gave her name to the period which lasted until the end of the century. (Daiches) With the arrival of Queen Victoria to the throne, the literature of the age took a new turn in reflecting the social issues of the time. William J. Long notes, ‘When Victoria became the queen, English literature seemed to have entered upon a period of lean years, in marked contrast with poetic fruitfulness of the romantic age which we have just studied.(Long) During this time, a movement was started in England in 1848 as an organization of painters who called themselves Pre-Raphaelites. This assignment aims to highlight the Pre-Raphaelite movement and its salient features to the general readers. 



THE PRE-RAPHAELITE MOVEMENT


The term Pre-Raphaelite, which refers to both art and literature, is confusing because there were essentially two different and almost opposed movements, the second of which grew out of the first. (Landow)

             The Pre-Raphaelite Movement of the Victorian age is assumed to be a strong reaction against the didacticism of previous ages. This was perhaps the idealistic reaction against the moral fervor and the preaching of poets and novelists with contemporary society. The reign of Queen Victoria marked the growing tendency of making literature a handmaid of social reform and an instrument for the propagation of moral and spiritual ideas. Literature was ideally becoming the vehicle of social, moral and political problems. 

             Novelists like Dickens, Carlyle, and Ruskin was deeply concerned about the social oppression of women and children as well as the harsh realities of developing England and therefore they were prominently engaged in attacking the evils rampant in the society of 19th century England. Some of the poets were also expressing the grave fear of age through their writings. These kinds of writings were deeply serious but the expression and tone were comic.

             The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood was against the occupation of poets, prose writers, and novelists with the mundane problems of the times. A set of high sold artists formed a group in 1848 called the 'Pre-Raphaelite group' and had an exhibition of their pictures. Their aim was to bring back technical sincerity and spiritual truth to the arts of painting and poetry. The members of this group or brotherhood were D G Rossetti, Holmon Hunt, and J E Millais and later it was joined by William Morris is an A. C. Swinburne. Dante Gabriel Rossetti was the leader of this group in England. The group is believed to have done their best to revive simplicity freshness and liberty in painting, and soon their attempt in the revival of poetry and sculpture in the same line.

             All the members of the brotherhood were repelled by the avaricious and materialistic contents that had controlled the minds of the major Victorians. The main purpose of this brotherhood was to escape from the world of grave realities to a land of beauty, art, and pleasantness where these personalities would satisfy their urge for art and creation of beautiful things.

             Originally it was the movement for the regeneration of painting on the models of the early Italian painters. Being dissatisfied with Raphael’s loftiness of conception and perfection of technique, this brotherhood thought of the early Italian painters having simplicity and natural grace. They wanted to encourage the originality of conception and freshness of content which Raphael discouraged. Their determination was to break away from stereotyped traditions in a painting set up by Raphael and return to the earlier painters of Italy whose work satisfied them with their freshness and liberty.



FEATURES OF PRE-RAPHAELITE MOVEMENT





ART FOR ART'S SAKE


Wordsworth believed that a poet was primarily a teacher and Keats said that he hated that poetry which had a perceptible design on the mind of readers. Keats discarded any moral or didactic purpose for he was first and foremost an artist. The Pre-Raphaelites followed the example of Keats and believed that poetry has no goodness to serve than to serve it. They were all artists and believed in art as their religion as well as aimed at the perfection of form and finish.  They had no morality to preach and no reforms to introduce through the medium of their poetry. Legouis rightly said,

The Pre-Raphaelites were above all artists. Art was their religion.”

Love of beauty was their creed and if in glorifying beauty they had to be sensuous, did not fear the charges of rabid castigators and critics like R.W. Buchanan attacked violently D. G. Rossetti for founding ‘the flashy School of poetry’.

RETURN TO MIDDLE AGES


The Pre-Raphaelite poetry is a continuation of the romantic poetry headed by Coleridge and Keats, particularly in the revival and glorification of the Middle Ages. In order to escape from the ugliness of contemporary society, they turned their eyes to the good old days of medievalism when chivalry and knighthood, adventure and heroism were in the air. D. G. Rossetti was the hero of this return to medievalism for poetic inspiration. His poems 'The Blessed Damozel' and 'Sister Helen' are medieval in outlook and form. The symbolism of the medical days is well-respected in them.

In the words of A. J. Wyatt,

"In literature, Coleridge, Keats, and Tennyson had all felt and expressed the mystery and romance of the age of chivalry. But no expression of the permanent value and inspiration of medieval ideas are more important than the work of Rossetti, Morris, and Swinburne. All make use of medieval imagery, medieval legend, and medieval ideas and create an atmosphere of medieval romance. Their middle ages are no more historical than those of Tennyson 'Idylls'; but they do not profess to be. The atmosphere of their works is the atmosphere of a dream, not of any real place or time, and their morality is the morality of the dream world." (Wyatt)

PICTORIAL ELEMENT


The Pre-Raphaelites were pictorial artists and their paintings, as well as poems, were symphonies in color. Their poems appear to be a rhythmic pageant of color. The pictorial element is more inconsistent in Rossetti than in Keats is obviously due to the fact that Rossetti's outlook on the world is essentially that of the painter. He thinks and feels in pigments. "Too much of thinking and feeling in pigment" leads to some defects. The two major defects in his poetry are -

  • The indulgence in over decoration
  • When related to the human body, the impression of sensuality or voluptuousness is created.

 Some examples of Rossetti's overwrought pictorial touches which first please but ultimately cloy the reader are the following-

“Her robe, unit, from clasp to hem
No wrought flowers did adorn
But a white rose of Mary's gift
For service meetly worth
Her hair that lay along her back
Was yellow like ripe corn” (Rossetti)

Rossetti's sensuousness often touches the border of lavishly decorated descriptions when he dwells upon the beauties of the human body. Perhaps this is why Robert Buchanan attacked Rossetti's poetry by calling it 'the fleshy school'.

One is charmed by the pictorial effect of the following lines from Rossetti's 'The Blessed Damozel'.

“The blessed Damozel leaned out
From the golden bar of heaven;
And the souls mounting up to God
Went by her like thin flames” (Rossetti)

MELODY


Pre-Raphaelite poetry is distinguished by its rich melody. They sought it deliberately and often sacrificed sense at the altar of sound. Emily Legouis rightly comments, "Vowels, call the vowels, and consonants to consonants and these links often seem stronger than the links of thought or imagery." (Legouis) The free flow of the swift-moving lines is remarkable in Swinburne. The following stanza from Swinburne's 'Atalanta in Calydon' is a masterpiece of musical harmony:

"The wild vine ships with the weight of its leaves,
But the berries ivy catches and cleaves
To the limbs that glitter, the feet that scare
The Wolf that follows, the fawn that flies." (Swinburne)



CONCLUSION


The movement was the humble adherence to truth, which was absent from the sophisticated art of Raphael and his successors. The movement was a praiseworthy attempt of reviving simplicity, freshness, newness, and freedom in painting which soon extended its bounds to include the revival of poetry and sculpture of the same lines.

The leaders of the movement sought to achieve in art and literature what Newman had tried to do in the church. In this way, the Pre-Raphaelite Movement supported by Oxford men became the child and heir of the Oxford movement.



 


WORKS CITED


1.Daiches, David. A Critical History of English Literature. 8th. Vol. 2. New Dehli: Supernova Publishers and distributors Pvt. Ltd., 2010. 2 vols.
2. Landow, George P. "Pre-Raphaelites: An Introduction." 19 May 2019. The Victorian Web. 07 March 2020 <http://www.victorianweb.org/painting/prb/1.html>.
3. Legouis, Emile, and Louis François Cazamian. A history of English literature. Vol. 2. JM Dent & Sons Limited, 1927.
4. Long, William J. English Literature Its History and its Significance for the Life of the English Speaking World. New Delhi: AITBS publishers, 2016.
5. Mahboob, Marwa. “16major Literary Movements.” Scribd, Scribd, www.scribd.com/document/126073177/16major-Literary-Movements.
6. Rossetti, Dante Gabriel. “The blessed damozel.” Duckworth, 1898.
7. Swinburne, Algernon Charles, and Morse Peckham. Poems and Ballads, “Atalanta in Calydon.” Ardent Media, 2000.
8. Wyatt, Alfred John. The Tutorial History of English Literature... 1901.


Thank you. 




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