Perfectly Poetic
Before poetry became a Pinterest quote or a cringey greeting card, it was wild. Soulful. Dramatic. Welcome to the world of Romanticism — the literary movement where emotion was a weapon, nature was sacred, and your existential crisis could become a 42-line poem. In this first episode of the Romanticism series, we dig into what made the Romantics tick (spoiler: feelings), how they turned heartbreak and thunderstorms into high art, and why their unapologetic emotional chaos still hits home today. Featuring poetic heavyweights like Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats, and Byron, we explore how Romanticism wasn’t just about writing pretty things — it was about feeling hard, living fully, and refusing to be numb. This isn’t your high school English class. This is poetry with teeth, rain-soaked revelation, and a little bit of dirt under the fingernails. Highlights include: * What Romanticism actually was — and what it was pushing back against * Nature as temple, therapist, and truth-teller * Byron’s smoldering ego, Shelley’s political rage, Keats’s gorgeous grief * Why this 200-year-old movement still describes your most vulnerable self better than your therapist Links & Resources: perfectlypoetic.com [https://perfectlypoetic.com] Instagram: @perfectlypoeticpodcast [https://instagram.com/perfectlypoeticpodcast] Facebook: facebook.com/perfectlypoetic [https://www.facebook.com/perfectlypoetic] Email: poetic@perfectlypoetic.com Tags: Romanticism, poetry, Wordsworth, Byron, Keats, Shelley, nature, emotion, literary rebellion
15 episodios
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