Auden as an Anti-Romantic Poet
Auden’s poetic theory and his
practice during his long career as a poet establish him as an anti-romantic
poet. According to him, a poet must have no decided opinion to put into his
poetry. He must be clinical and dispassionate about life. While he composes his
poems, he must remain detached from his own feelings. Thus like T. S. Eliot he
is an anti-romantic poet.
There is an apparent lack of
emotion in the poems of Auden. He rejected poetry as a magical means of
inducing emotions in the poet and the readers, and accepted the view that
poetry is a ‘game of knowledge’. This knowledge of good and evil leads us to
the point where it is possible for us to make a rational and moral choice.
Auden is anti-romantic in his
treatment of nature. Auden never sees nature in any of the traditional ways. He
does not portray it, like the Georgians of like the nineteenth century poets,
hold it up as an example to escape from the industrial city.
In his treatment of love, Auden is
not a romantic but realistic, since his love poetry meditates rather than
emotes. The most remarkable feature of his treatment of love is that it distinguishes
his poetry from the traditional English love poetry by its significant
intellectual content and effect. In ‘Lullaby’, the lover speaker is aware of
the mortal and guilty nature of his beloved, and of his own faithlessness. But
both are human beings and prone to weakness. Hence the lover finds his beloved
entirely beautiful and desirable or lovable in spite of all her faults. Thus
in his treatment of love Auden is also anti-romantic.
To sum up, in his conception and
practice of poetry, Auden is clearly anti-romantic. By temperament he has been
a counter romantic. He has been hostile to that spirit which swells the
writer’s ego.
Auden's all poems are concerned with modern problems and other various issues.
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