The Influence of the French Revolution on Romanticism




The French Revolution is extensively considered one of the most important events of late eighteenth and early nineteenth-century Europe, with consequences in political, cultural, social, and literary fields.
So, the French Revolution was an event that completely impacted the philosophy and writings of Romantic writers and poets. That resolution was more than a time of redeeming the oppressed and removing old ideas and prejudices that certified few wealthy rules over the poor majority; it was a time, for example, that the "romantics:, viewed as apocalyptic _ the gratification of Judeo-Christian visions.
So. the French Revolution was more than the moving way of the political and social power of romantic artists and writers, it was the development and change of morality that resembled the quiet-peaceful, and non-violent nature of man.
 But the French Revolution did not live up to the anticipations and expectations of all. However, that resolution concreted the way for massive social, political, and economic change or modification. So. many philosophers, thinkers, and writers of the period, like William Godwin, and John Jacques  Rousseau, provided greater appreciation due to the French Revolution. The result of the revolution; its calamities, tragedies disappointments, failings, and successes also helped set the new way for Wordsworth, Coleridge, William Godwin, William Blake, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and other Romantic poets and writers, as they moved from the somber to the expectation of peace and a new principle.
French Resolution also struggled for change in the kingdom, religion, and social difference.
Enlightenment ideas of equality, citizenship and human rights are those beliefs, which had a philosophical and moral impact on the Romantic poets and writers.

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