Romanticism
Song of Myself
Out of the Cradle
Dickinson
Frost
100

What time period is associated with Romanticism?

Civil War; American Industrialism; the mid- to late-1800's

100

What did Dr. Blair say his favorite line of the poem was?

And now it seems to me the beautiful uncut hair of graves...

100

The "rocking cradle" is a reference to...?

The sea

100

Dickinson's poems can be sung to the tune of hymns because they're in _____ meter.

common

100

In what period did Frost write?

1890's - early 1920's

200

The principal form of Romantic poetry is... (no form? metered verse?)

free verse

200

Who is Whitman writing for? 

The common man

200

What events take place in this poem?

Whitman, as a boy, witnesses the grief of a mockingbird who loses its mate.

(This event changes him, and causes him to grow up. He feels everything deeper than before, because he understands that things, relationships, etc. can be lost.)

200

What feelings does Dickinson evoke in "I taste a liquor never brewed?" 

Drunk on life, more so than the bees and the butterflies.

200

In "Birches," Frost compares the way the bent birch trees look to...

girls drying their hair

300

For a poem to be "lyric," it must have...

ONE speaker, or a single narrative voice ("I"), like Whitman's "Song of Myself."

300

What institutions does Whitman mean when he writes "Creeds and schools in abeyance...retiring back awhile sufficed at what they are, but never forgotten?"

Churches, schools, all the institutions which teach people how to live. Whitman believes we should keep them, but pay less attention to them than we pay to our internal compass.

300

What kind of poem is this? (e.g. elegie, ballad) (remember that it memorializes the lost bird)

bildungsroman OR elegie

300

"Because I could not stop for Death" personifies death in what way?

A horse-drawn carriage.

300

What do the birch trees represent for the poet in "Birches"?

Transcendence and return

400

Emotions or logic?

Emotions; the "felt sense" of the world

400

"And to die is different from what anyone assumed, and...?" 

luckier

400

What do shadows and evening represent in the poem?

death

400

Emily Dickinson's "There's a certain Slant of light," set in winter, is probably about...

mental anguish, spiritual death, feeling oppressed.

400

"The woods are lovely, dark and deep

but I have promises to keep

and miles to go before I sleep

and miles to go before I sleep."

What does Frost mean?

Life marches on; we might like to spend all our time contemplating the woods, but we have to take care of the tasks and promises of life. 

"Sleep" may also mean death.

500

Romanticism DIVERGES from (must get one of the three)

didactic, traditional, classical poetry

500

What's a hieroglyphic, in Romantic terms?

A symbol, usually a natural fact or substance, which shows a deeper spiritual truth. 

Emerson: "Natural facts are signs of spiritual facts."

Example: grass

500

Paumanok is the Native name for what place?

Long Island

500

What does the fly represent in "I heard a fly buzz-- when I died?"

Doubt about God's existence, a distraction from the holiness of death, which comes between her and the sky/window. 

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