How to Be a Romantic Poet
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Adam Goodheart Utne Reader
O reader! Does a drowsy numbness pain your sense? Does the sight of
a ruined abbey send you into dizzy raptures? If so, you may be
ready to take your place among the immortal poets of the Romantic
era. Just follow these simple instructions, and become a permanent
fixture on the English 101 syllabus.
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1. Mien and Demeanor
First, look the part. One thing the Romantics had in common was
hair, and lots of it -- masses of glossy curls, preferably
raven-hued. Wear an open-necked shirt in all weather; this will
both expose your shapely throat and help you to catch a wasting
ailment (see Step 4). If you have a tendency toward fat, emulate
Lord Byron: When he found himself exceeding the limits of poetic
girth, he played cricket wearing seven waistcoats and a greatcoat
until he was once again suitably ethereal.
Get an early start. As a teenager, Shelley was already sleeping
with pistol and poison under his pillow, and writing poems about
nuns with 'half-eaten eyeballs.' Suicide must always be an option.
' I should, many a good day, have blown my brains out,' reflected
Byron, 'but for the recollection that it would have given pleasure
to my mother-in-law.'
2. Dissipation and Love
Youthful exploits can fall into two categories: athletics or
expulsions. Either swim or walk a notable distance (Byron, Keats)
or get kicked out of school for a scurrilous publication (Shelley
for The Necessity of Atheism; Southey for The Flagellant, a protest
against flogging). Later, ingest large quantities of controlled
substances. Coleridge chose opium; Byron preferred to quaff claret
from the skull of a medieval monk.
In matters of the heart, you must be either a conspicuous
failure or a conspicuous success. Keats was too short (barely five
feet) to find love, which induced professionally useful melancholy.
Byron's amours, on the other hand, ran the gamut from his Calvinist
Bible teacher to an Italian countess to a Cambridge choirboy to his
own half-sister. He left broken hearts and illegitimate children in
his wake, which scandalized England and boosted sales.