Romantic Poets and Their Works
Shankar Kumar Jayvardhan, .
DOI: 10.64127/rnimj.2025v1i2006
DOI URL: https://doi.org/10.64127/rnimj.2025v1i2006
Published Date: 20 December 2025
Issue: Vol. 1 ★ Issue 2 ★ October - December 2025
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Abstract:

The British Romantic movement (c.1780s–1832) was a literary revolution that emphasised emotion, nature, and individual creativity over Enlightenment rationalism . Key Romantic poets include Wordsworth (1770–1850), Coleridge (1772–1834), Byron (1788–1824), Shelley (1792–1822), and Keats (1795–1821). This paper presents succinct profiles of each poet – life dates, brief biography, major works (with dates), representative poems, and themes (e.g. nature, imagination, heroism, political idealism, beauty, mortality). We assume these five poets typify the period’s concerns. A comparative section analyses common Romantic elements (celebration of nature, emotion, revolution of language) and individual innovations (e.g. Wordsworth’s use of everyday speech , Coleridge’s supernatural imagery, Byron’s Byronic hero, Shelley’s radical politics, Keats’s odes and “negative capability”). The poets’ legacy (the rise of the personal lyric and modern poetry) is assessed, and a conclusion summarises the findings. A table compares poets across attributes, and a timeline (mermaid chart) maps major publications. Sources include primary poems and scholarly references (Britannica, Poetry Foundation, academic companions) to ensure accuracy and no plagiarism.