Sunday 8 March 2020

Assignment 6 - Victorian Spirit of Writing

Hello Readers!

This assignment is a part of internal evaluation of student's academic activity in the Department of English, MK Bhavnagar University. Here is my assignment.

Name: Rohit Vyas
Class: Semester 2
Roll No: 21
PG Enrolment Number: 2069108420200041
E-mail: rohitvyas277@gmail.com
Course: M.A. English, at Department of English, M.K. Bhavnagar University
Paper 6 – Victorian Literature, Unit 4
Submitted to: Dr. Dilip Barad


Victorian Spirit of Writing

Introduction

As it is known that the Victorian Age is the most influential period in English literature. It gave very famous poets, novelists and non-fiction writers. It was in 1837 when the Queen Victoria came to throne and along with this incident it was a wiping wind of the quietness of the literature. It was the time in Romantic Age when Keats, Shelley, Byron, Coleridge and Scott wrote their part but as it is mentioned beautifully in William J Long’s history, Wordsworth had written, in 1835,

Like clouds that rake the mountain summits,
Or waves that own no curbing hand,
How fast has brother followed brother,
From the sunshine to the sunless land! (Long 452)

          These lines try to state that in the age of Romanticism, there were many writers through which the age was prosperous with literature, and the Romantic age ended so fast with the deaths of one writer after another, that it got disappeared into the turmoil of time.

          This pace and upheaval of literary activities was minimized in Victorian age. The initial years suffered from the emptiness of authors.
In this assignment it is highlighted that how the Victorian Age influenced the literary writers to reflect on literature. Spanning form 1850 to 1900 of the period, much emphasis has put on the historical events that enabled the authors to write according to Victorian spirit.

Victorian Spirit
It was the time when peace and idealism were in its prime. The habit and culture was such that it was classified in two parts such as high and low. There were some customs and practices which were prevalent among the Victorian people and it directly reflected in the literature of the Victorian age. For example, bowing down to each other while meeting people and greeting a farewell with few words was considered as high Victorian spirit. Authors sought to instruct the society and give them a message of morality.

Progress and Unrest
          It was the time when industrial development and new inventions of machines were being invented. Along with science, arts were also growing. Spinning looms, steam boats and electric lights are few examples. The growth in lifestyle with these materialistic things came with the improvements in education also. The authors of the age also didn’t remain aloof from this unrest and poor state of living. Robert Browning could not find a publisher for his work Pauline, so he took help from his relative and then published the poems. Charles Dickens also faced much hardship in his early years and struggled a lot to make two ends meet.

Writing Style
          Authors of this age preferred long narrative because they had many things to share in the form of stories. They chose their characters in a large number, each of them having a key importance in the narrative. Stories were largely focusing upon societal affairs and events like marriage and relationships. Interestingly authors sensibly followed the real life happenings like welfare of poor and deprived. This clearly reflects in the writing of the prominent novelist of the age, Charles Dickens’ Oliver Twist. Majorly the writing style in the novels drew much attention because the age was known as an age of prose. Much emphasis has been put on the novelists and prose writers of the age. Non-fiction writers also made their space in literature.

Authors of the Age
          In the Victorian age, there were many poets and prose writers as follows. Prose, poetry and non-fiction all the trio of genres came up in the groups of writers.

Alfred Lord Tennyson (1809 – 1892) – Learned and a man of empathy and morals, Tennyson was a noble hearted poet who always tried to stay away from popularity. He was a poet laureate after the death of William Wordsworth. He produced poems which contained messages to people and society. His contemporary poet was Robert Browning. Tennyson has written a collection of poems like In Memorium and Idylls of the King, Poems. The last title he has written at the age of twenty-two. He has written very famous poem “Crossing the Bar”. Some of the poems are noticeable like “Palace of Heart”, “A Dream of Fair Woman”, and “The Lotos Eaters”. His friends encouraged him to show such work to the world and thus in 1842 his collection of poems containing a simple name Poems was published. Thomas Carlyle describes him as follows
“a fine, large-featured, dim-eyed, bronze-colored, shaggy-headed man, … most restful, brotherly, solid-hearted.” (Long 461)

Robert Browning (1812 – 1889) – Along with Tennyson, Robert Browning also came up with moral messages in his poetry. He was mostly considered as a teacher. However, the age needed some of the good teachers and preachers also. His poetry contained dramatic structure and style.

To quote the original lines his writing style is describes as follows,

He is not, like so many others, an entertaining poet. One cannot read him after dinner, or when settled in a comfortable easy-chair. One must sit up, and think, and be alert when he reads Browning. If we accept these conditions, we shall probably find Browning is the most stimulating poet in our language. (Long 471)

Charles Dickens (1812 – 1870) – As the Victorian age grew; it was known that social unrest and was there in democracy. Along with growing tolerance and brotherhood there was a bad notion of selling and buying of slaves also. Social slavery took place by making the slaves work in mines and factories. During this period, one boy who was once struggling hard to gain one time food, and with ample lived experiences, grew as a popular writer of the age, who was Charles Dickens. He imbibed all the dark matters of the Victorian age in his literature. His characters represented moral and ethical standards. Oliver Twist is an apt example of the social practices in London during the reign of Queen Victoria.

John Ruskin (1819 – 1900) – With his work Unto This Last (1862) Ruskin established his multidisciplinary knowledge to literature. Mahatma Gandhi was influenced by this collection of essays which talked about the principles of political economy. Along with this he also Munera Pulveris (1862) containing the strong protesting voice against competitive system. Even the Victorian non-fictional essays can make a positive impact on the minds of politicians and social activists also.

Thomas Carlyle (1795 – 1881) – Essayist and translator, Carlyle can be seen with two judgments; the first is of minor writings like Chartism, Latter-Day Pamphlets, Shooting Niagara. These minor writings say that his style of writing is barbaric and denouncing almost everything which he did not understand. The other judgment is based upon Heroes and Hero Worship, Cromwell, Sartor Resartus. Such works established him as a teacher, leader, and the foreseer of the nineteenth century. All his writings were for truth of God and justice. Later on he wrote biographies, histories and translated many major works. His major work was French Revolution (1837).

George Eliot (1819 – 1880) – Through the lengthy volumes of Middlemarch, George Eliot made a remarkable attempt in the age. With the upbringing of the female characters Eliot highlights the drawbacks of not to educating women. With the proper learning and teaching one can be better person especially in decision making. Dorothea Brook comes forward as a true Victorian heroine while penning down her qualities. Her keen interest in learning new things from books is one of the striking satires on the rigid mindset of patriarchal thought that women should not be educated. It is clearly visible why Mary Ann Evans hid her actual identity behind the masculine name as George Eliot. Through her novel Middlemarch: A Study of Provincial Life readers come to know that what kind of Victorian spirit was there. It can be said that human relations, in terms of marriage were very loose. The way George Eliot has depicted the characters shows that it might affect the women a lot then a man.

Matthew Arnold (1822 – 1888) – Among the non-fiction writers, Arnold stands at the summit of criticism in the Victorian era. In the year 1869, he published his most controversial critical essay Culture and Anarchy which is considered one of the famous critical essays even today. To quote the original line form a source, Arnold’s writing is describes as follows,

“In his poetry he reflects the doubt of an age which witnessed the conflict between science and religion.” (Long 545)
“In his prose he shows the cavalier spirit, - aggressive, light-hearted, self-confident. Like Carlyle, he dislikes shams, and protests against what he calls the barbarians of society; but he writes with a light touch, using a satire and banter as the better part of his argument.” (Long 545)

Arnold also wrote poems in the early years of his literary contribution. He was a professor of poetry at Oxford also. Arnold’s narrative style made him write a famous poem Sohrab and Rustom (1853) and Balder Dead (1855).

Conclusion
          This age could have become more prosperous if it could have given open space to women writer with the acceptance of their education and upbringing. It was a remarkable age in the history because in literature, it gave voice to the voiceless. Historically looking, the age was of becoming mature in intellect and scientific inventions such as power loom and steam engines. To the onlookers, it may seem that the age is filled with sympathy and misery of poor but its other side is rich enough with critical thinking and the notion of looking for a better future which was the upcoming age nineteenth century.

Works Cited
Long, William J. English Literature: Its History and its Significance for the Life of the English Speaking World. Delhi: AITB, 2015.

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