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 LITR 5535: American
Romanticism 
  
  
  Kristy Pawlak 
LITR 5535 Dr. White 9/29/03 The
  Changing Attitudes Towards God, Nature, and Man in American Romanticism            
  In any work of philosophy or literature, treatments of nature, God, and
  man reflect the dominant thinking of the time period. 
  American Romanticism appears at a time when a transition is underway in
  philosophical and religious thinking in America. 
  By examining Pre-Romantic writers such as Jonathan Edwards and Anne
  Bradstreet, and by looking at the ideas of the Age of Reason as seen in the
  writings of Thomas Paine and Thomas Jefferson, the “predictive elements in
  ‘pre-romantic’ writings” can be used as tools to study the transition
  underway in Cooper’s writings as he moves towards transcendental thoughts
  much like those seen in the writings of Emerson. 
              
  The role of nature occupies an important place in all early American
  writing.  However, as time moves
  on and America is influenced by European movements and thought, the place
  nature holds in literature changes significantly. 
  Writings from the Seventeenth Century, such as the poetry of Anne
  Bradstreet, show an attitude of admiration for nature, but this admiration
  centers on nature’s role as visible evidence of God’s greatness. 
  Bradstreet writes, “If so much excellence abide below, How excellent
  is He that dwells on high, Whose power and beauty by His works we know”
  (134).  The contemplation of
  nature takes place not for personal gratification or even for simple
  enjoyment, but, rather, nature serves as a reassurance that God exists and is
  omnipotent.  In a time when so
  little was assured, this was a very necessary role. 
              
  As early as the writings of Jonathan Edwards, the Romantic idea of the
  “individual in nature or separate from the masses” begins to emerge. 
  Edwards tells us that he has, “particular secret places of my own in
  the woods, where I used to retire by myself, and used to be from time to time
  much affected” (Norton 176).  Nature
  is, for Edwards, a place to be, “sweetly conversing with Christ, and rapt
  and swallowed up in God” (Norton 178). 
  While these aspects of Edward’s relationship with nature look forward
  to Romantic ideas, he, like Bradstreet, still sees nature as evidence of
  God’s greatness, not something to be worshiped itself, but something to
  point to its all-powerful Creator.  Edwards
  writes: And
  as I was walking there, and looked up on the sky and clouds, there came into
  my mind a sweet sense of the glorious majesty and grace of God that I know not
  how to express.  I seemed to see
  them both in a sweet conjunction, majesty and meekness joined together.  It was a sweet and gentle, and holy majesty; and also a
  majestic meekness; an awful sweetness; a high, and great, and holy gentleness
  (Norton 178).   He also tells us that
  “God’s excellency, His wisdom, His purity and love, seemed to appear in
  everything: in the sun, moon and stars; in the clouds, and blue sky; in the
  grass, flowers, trees; in the water, and all nature” (Norton 178). 
  Edwards never admires nature without calling attention to what it shows
  about God’s greatness.            
  Nature’s role undergoes a change with the coming of the Age of
  Reason, or the Enlightenment.  Thinkers
  during this time revered nature not because it highlighted the immense and
  unmeasurable power and majesty of God, but because it showed the orderliness
  and predictability  of the
  universe.  Scientific discoveries were highly valued during this time
  and the value of nature was in its natural process.  Deism is a prevalent theory during this time period. 
  In regards to nature, deism explained God’s role as a regulator of
  natural events.  Unlike writers
  before them, writers during this time were not awestruck by nature’s
  phenomena, in fact, they did not believe in miracles as usually defined. 
  Paine writes in his work The Age of Reason:  Mankind
  have conceived to themselves certain laws, by which what they call nature is
  supposed to act; and that miracle is something contrary to the operation and
  effect of those laws; but unless we know the whole extent of those laws, and
  of what are commonly called the powers of nature, we are not able to judge
  whether anything that may appear to us wonderful or miraculous be within, or
  be beyond, or be contrary to, her natural power of acting (Part 1, Section
  14).   The emphasis on the laws
  of nature in this quote from Paine is also evident in Jefferson’s writings. 
  In fact, Jefferson secures a place in history for the reverence of the
  laws of nature when he writes in the Declaration of Independence, “... to
  which the laws of nature and of nature’s God entitle them” (325).  All this is not to say that these writers and philosophers
  did not believe in God or give Him credit for His creations, they did. 
  They revere Him for the precision and thoughtfulness of nature. 
  While Bradstreet is awed by the Creator of the inexplicable vastness
  and beauty of what she saw, Paine and those of his age are awed by a Creator
  who had made a system that man could rationalize and predict.                
  American Romanticism takes a few characteristics from the Age of Reason
  in its treatment of nature, but for the most part this is one area where a
  rapid movement towards the Transcendental way of thinking can be seen. 
  For instance, in the beginning of Cooper’s The Last of the
  Mohicans,  Hawk-eye attempts
  to give a very reasoned and logical explanation of tides and currents to
  Chingachgook.  He is somewhat
  unsuccessful, though neither he nor his Indian friend seem to really press the
  point.  Later in the novel,
  Hawk-eye even indulges in the very Romantic–and very unreasonable–notion
  of the supernatural when they are met by the French soldier outside the fort.  The most important shift towards the Transcendental view of
  nature which occurs in Cooper’s novel is the subtle, but very important
  attitude of nature as an object of worship in and of itself. 
  While Cooper and many Transcendentalists do state that nature proves
  God’s existence, there is a definite attitude difference from previous
  writers.  In previous writings
  nature’s beauty immediately leads to the worship of God. 
  Cooper, through the character of Hawk-eye, takes a step towards the
  Transcendental.  After arguing a
  point of doctrine with the scout, Gamut gives up realizing that he “battled
  with a disputant who imbibed his faith from the lights of nature, eschewing
  all subtleties if doctrine” (117).  For earlier writers, nature reinforces doctrine, for
  Romantics, nature begins to replace doctrine.            
  Attitudes towards nature are not the only change occuring during the
  Romantic time period.  Man’s role in philosophy and religion undergoes some
  radical changes as well.  In
  Seventeenth Century writings man exists entirely to glorify his Maker.  Man is at best inadequate and at worst abominable. 
  Bradstreet writes, “Man at the best a creature frail and vain, In
  knowledge ignorant, in strength but weak” (139). 
  Edwards talks about his “conflicts with wicked inclinations” 
  (176).  He struggles with
  his inherent sinfulness saying that he cannot say how his “sins appear to me
  to be than by heaping infinite upon infinite, and multiplying infinite by
  infinite” (185).  Through all of
  this man exists to praise God and lives at His pleasure. 
  Man’s only sense of superiority in this system is derived from his
  place over nature and his promise of eternal life with God.  This ties together with the important distinction that man
  does not worship nature in Bradstreet’s words, “Shall I then praise the
  heavens, the trees, the earth, Because their beauty and their strength last
  longer?... Nay, they shall darken, perish, fade, and die... But man was made
  for endless immortality” (137).            
  When discussing man’s place in a system of thinking, it naturally
  follows to discuss God’s place, and by association, religion’s place. 
  For writers like Bradstreet and Edwards, it is apparent that God
  occupied the first and foremost position in their lives, thoughts, and
  actions.  It can be hypothosized
  that because scientific discoveries were not a prominent topic of thought in
  America at this time and that because these writers were at the mercy of a
  wild and untamed country, they needed to place their unquestioning faith in
  something bigger and more powerful than themselves. 
  Krissan Muskievicz notes, “as a part of the settlers’ noble
  adventure, surely they were also scared. 
  As they fulfilled their quest for independence, the ability to conquer
  fears and challenges became a trait that defined America.” 
  Faith in God was one tool they used to face their difficulties.  
  Not only this, but they also relied on the doctrines of the church to
  provide a stable force in their lives.  Edwards
  writes, “The doctrines of God’s absolute sovereignty and free grace...
  These doctrines have been much to my delight,” and “I have loved the
  doctrine’s of the gospel; they have been to my soul like green pastures”
  (183).  While these writers looked
  to nature as a visible reminder of God’s holiness, they never allowed
  anything to replace the importance of the word of God–the Bible. 
  Edwards tells us that he has “an affecting sense of the excellency of
  the word of God, as a word of life” (184). 
  Indeed, in Mary Rowlandson’s captivity narrative, her Bible and the
  Scripture are her constant sources of support. 
  She calls on scripture to sustain her, “Be still and know that I am
  God” (Psalm 46:10), and to help her comfort others, “Wait on the Lord, Be
  of good courage, and he shall strengthen thine Heart, wait I say on the
  Lord” (Psalm 27:14) (155).              
  During the Age of Reason, deism profoundly affected man’s place in
  the grand scheme of things.  While
  earlier writers seem to almost degrade man in an effort to elevate God, these
  thinkers begin to elevate man in order to bring him closer to God. 
  They believed that God had favored man over other creatures by giving
  them the power to reason.  They
  further believed that man was called to use this gift of reason to decipher
  the laws of nature.   Prominent
  figures of this time such as Jefferson did not go as far as to say that all
  men had this ability to intelligently reason. 
  The Norton anthology quotes Dumas Malone as saying that Jefferson,
  “trusted the common man, if measurably enlightened and kept in rural
  virtue” (323).            
  In relation to God and religion, writers from this period generally
  feel that belief in God is a natural extension of a logical examination of the
  natural world.  Paine writes that
  “The belief of a God... is of all beliefs the most easy, because it arises
  to us, as is before observed, out of necessity” (Part 1, Section 14). 
  It is during this time that the shift from God being worshiped for who
  He is to God being worshiped for what He does occurred. 
  The value of God was now seen in the value of his best creation–man. 
              
In The Last of the Mohicans, Cooper deals with the issues of
man’s place and God/religion in much the same way he deals with nature. 
He takes a few characteristics from his predecessors, but for the most
part he looks forward to Transcendentalism. 
According to the entry under “transcendentalism” in The Columbia
Encyclopedia, the movement began as a reaction against Calvinism and the
Unitarian Church.  They established
a faith, “centering on the divinity of man and nature.” 
This movement saw a surge in individualism based on “the beliefs that
God is immanent in man and nature and that individual intuition is the highest
source of knowledge.”  These
beliefs put them at odds with established religion which Emerson claims “puts
an affront upon nature” (517).              
Cooper sets up a tension between the “old” way of thinking and the
“new” by showing us the opposing viewpoints of Gamut and Hawk-eye. 
Gamut finds comfort and relief in the doctrines of religion while
Hawk-eye has little use for church doctrines. 
Gamut remarks in a conversation about predestination, “This is the
doctrine of truth, and most consoling and refreshing it is to the true
believer.” To this Hawk-eye replies, “Doctrine, or no doctrine, tis the
belief of knaves...” (116).  Later
in the same argument Gamut shows the reverence of Bradstreet and Edwards for
Scripture when he demands of Hawk-eye the Biblical basis for his beliefs. 
It here that Hawk-eye explains that nature is his book and that anyone
who cannot see God in nature is a “fool” (117). 
Hawk-eye is a self-reliant character who consistently refuses to accept
the traditional authority of religious beliefs.  He even has a quibble with the understood definition of
heaven as it would not be “heaven” for an Indian to be cooped up in a
mansion all day.  Likewise, he makes
a moral distinction between the moral actions of the Indians as opposed to white
men.  This defies any doctrine of an
absolute morality or moral code handed down by God or the church.            
The ideas and philosophies regarding nature, man, and God are central to
the literature of every time period.  Each
period borrows from those who come before and looks forward to new ideas
appearing on the horizon.  American
Romanticism is no different.  There
are definite “predictive elements” in earlier works, but Cooper, as an
example of an American Romantic work, shows us that in key ways Romanticism
progressively moves towards Transcendental thought in these three key areas.  
 
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