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LITR 5535: American
Romanticism Theresa
Matthews Gothic
Romanticism in the American Renaissance
Romanticism imbued with gothic elements is a power that continues to draw
readers to the classics of the American Renaissance.
Dark, decay, and gloomy settings are the backdrop for the supernatural
phenomena found in the Romantic literature of Mary Rowlandson, Washington
Irving, and James Fenimore Cooper. Rowlandson’s narrative captivity is a
Pre-Romantic work that threads elements of fear effecting a passionate,
terror-filled encounter with the unknown. Then
Irving, in his tale of mystery and legend, refines the gothic techniques in
“The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.” Finally,
Cooper’s romantic novel, The Last of the
Mohicans, employs complex elements of Gothic correspondence and sublimity
introducing readers to the imaginative self.
“A Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson”
by Mary Rowlandson was written in a time when reason and logic, order and
balance were esteemed conventions in the literary arts.
However, living on the frontier in New England was not conducive to these
conventions nor to Puritan morality prized by society.
With this in mind, threads of the Romantic precepts develop in
Rowlandson’s narrative captivity. These
trace elements evince through the gothic tradition of a mysterious, dark setting
and a suggestion of the supernatural. Rowlandson
describes her initial capture, “It is a solemn sight to see . . . Christians
lying in their blood, … like a company of sheep torn by wolves … stripped
naked by a company of hell-hounds, roaring, singing, ranting, and insulting, as
if they would have torn our very hearts out…” (Norton 137).
The image of Christians as sheep being torn apart by the wolves that are
Indians truly initiates an unimagined terror in the mind of the reader.
Indeed, the horrific images of hell and grotesque monsters capture the
audience just as surely as if they had been captured with Rowlandson, and the
Indians are no longer definable as humans but as fiendish “hounds” to be
hunted and killed as otherworldly beasts whose home is not earth but hell.
Rowlandson furthers this nightmarish imagery through descriptions of her
captors, “Oh the roaring, and singing and dancing, and yelling of those black
creatures in the night, which made the place a lively resemblance of hell”
(138). Consistently, a cultic image
materializes as Rowlandson reveals her tale of terror.
The “creatures” appear to be engaged in a ritual that is at once
obscene and horrific to the senses. To
reinforce the atmosphere of terror, the setting infuses images of the color
“black” and “hell” to reveal danger and terror of the unknown. The
gothic elements of the supernatural are disturbing and produce a highly
emotional, unreasonable, unwavering empathy for the author’s plight.
The “style overwhelms the reality” (class notes).
Consequently, Rowlandson’s narrative effectively demonizes the
“red” indigenous savages of the New World.
These
gothic elements are more perceptible in the early Romantic writings of
Washington Irving’s “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.”
As the story begins, the land (Tarry Town) possesses an exotic
characteristic, “…[it] is one of the quietest places in the whole world…a
small brook glides through it…[it is] uniform tranquility” (Irving 2094).
The image expresses an Edenic quality that is sequestered from the rest
of the world. However, Irving
juxtaposes this image with gothic elements that add suspense and heighten the
emotions, “…the place was bewitched by a high German doctor…that holds a
spell over the minds of the good people…” (2094). Both past and present
supernatural legends seducingly influence its inhabitants.
The “bewitching” history of the populace chillingly primes the
audience to accept the reigning folklore of the “ghost of a Hessian trooper,
whose head had been carried away by a cannonball…and haunts…the
valley…[and] adjacent roads…” on horseback (2094).
Irving creates a gothic correspondence between “this legendary
superstition” and the newcomers of Tarry Town, “they are sure, in a little
time, to inhale the witching influence of the air, and begin to grow
imaginative, . . . and see apparitions” (2095).
Irving implies that all inhabitants are susceptible to superstition and
gloom. The inner mind of the community corresponds with the mysterious
surroundings, so that they are compelled to believe in the superstitious legends
in Tarry Town. Moreover, the
pedagogical Ichabod departs with a heavy heart from a local gathering and
travels into the lonely night, and a “correspondence exists between Ichabod
and his surroundings” (Muskievicz 1). The
gothic scene surfaces with terrifying suspense as “All the stories of ghosts
and goblins that he had heard, now came crowding upon his recollection…[and] [t]he
night grew darker and darker; …he thought he saw something white, …perceived
that it was a place where …the white wood laid bare” (2108).
Ichabod’s emotions, whether self-induced or authentic, feed into the
frenzy of fear, and as he looks upon nature, it grows dark.
Notice too the startling contrast of dark and white.
As Ichabod’s thoughts turn to the darker side of emotions, his
surroundings reflect his deep, dark mood. The
bleakness of color, black and white, connote the eerie, the phantasmic, the
gloom of certain dread. Add to this, the image of an “enormous tulip-tree,
which towered like a giant…its limbs were gnarled, and fantastic…twisting
down almost to the earth…” furthers the transformation of nature into
specter. Ichobod’s fearful
encounter with the supposed goblin is his last, a “…huge, misshapen, black,
and towering” phantom appears and pursues the quivering Ichabod.
These gothic elements of the supernatural and the unknown converge and
thrill the reader to nervous anticipation of Ichabod’s demise. In keeping with
legend, superstition, and mystery, the morning reveals Ichabod’s horse, but
Ichabod is never found. The legend
continues to reinvent itself with Ichabod as the latest victim. Romanticism
threaded with gothic elements culminate in Cooper’s classic novel, The Last of the Mohicans. Cooper
permeates the Edenic American wilderness with the elements of Gothicism to
manifest a realm of terror. The
wilderness becomes the “haunted castle” of Europe, “the gloom … was
thickening beneath the leafy arches of the forest” (Cooper 45).
“Gloom” and “leafy arches” define a daunting space in nature that
resembles the “flamboyant, mysterious, or even frightening” Gothic buildings
of France (Murfin 191). The Edenic wilderness has taken on a new persona that is
strange and full of danger. Cooper
then artfully blends the frightening wilderness with the “sarpent” Huron
Indians, “[in the] topmost leaves…scantily concealed the gnarled and stunted
limbs, a savage was nestled, partly exposed by the trunk of the tree…”
(Cooper 73). This is reminiscent of
the ancient serpent’s deceit in the Garden of Eden.
Behold the beauty of the wilderness, yet beware the perils that lie in
wait. The Hurons function as the “supernatural,” mimicking the
cunning and deceit of Satan. Cooper
then heightens the nervous sensation with Gothic correspondence when Hawk-eye
and his companions escape the savage “devils” to find sanctuary “in the
grave of the dead Mohawks” (126). In
this atmosphere of death, the sisters could not “entirely suppress an emotion
of natural horror,” and “[the] gray light, the gloomy little area of dark
grass…and the death like stillness of the vast forest, were all in unison to
deepen such a sensation” (126). The
gruesome space reinforces the near death experience of the sisters and Heywood.
Thus, nature reflects the appalling “sensation” of death.
Also, the gradation of color to “gray” underscores the lushness
usually associated with a forest, and the “gloom” corresponds with the
emotions of the sisters and Heywood. Finally,
Cooper initiates the gothic element of sublimity to further emphasize the
individual experience. The Hurons
are once again on the brink of discovering the evasive Hawk-eye and his
companions when the thrilling tension builds, “Duncan, brave as he was in the
combat, could not, in such a moment of painful suspense, make a reply…”
(131). The strongest emotion which
the mind is capable of feeling is terror” (Burke 310).
Cooper incorporates the immediacy of danger and terror through Duncan’s
emotional reaction to their perilous situation. Duncan realizes that the tiniest of sound or movement will
divulge their hiding spot, and the blood-thirsty Hurons’ proximity is
unimaginably close to discovery. Nervous
anticipation through Duncan’s “pain” renders the audience chillingly
helpless. Gothic sublimity taps
into the psyche of the audience, indelibly creating a phenomenal frightening
encounter with literature. Gothicism
in the American Renaissance lures audiences by effecting passionate responses
through its literature. Rowlandson’s
narrative captivity employs the supernatural and dark setting to give voice to
her horrific ordeal in a wilderness with “savages.” Irving’s advanced use of gothic elements give rise to the
supernatural genre in the early Romantic Era, while Cooper’s stylistic use of
Gothic writing earns him critically acclaimed success.
All three authors richly use the power of Romanticism to heighten the
sensations of its audience and elevate the reader to a place of the unknown.
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