The great season of British poetic Romanticism, started by the generation of the 1790s, left a precious heritage to a group of young poets, whose short and intense lives all ended around the beginning of the 1820s.
Political commitment had played an important role in providing contents and influencing literary practise ever since William Blake's
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Songs of Innocence and of Experience (1794), while the great French Revolution
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[I1], with its subversion of the static world of the Ancient Regime, had remarkably determined the spirit of the times even in self-isolated Britain. These were the times in which the literary "brotherhood" between William Wordsworth
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and Samuel Taylor Coleridge
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had given birth to the strong moral engagement of the Lyrical Ballads (notably, the all-famous Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner, 1798).
While the democratic values of the new bourgeoisie were first twisted into personal ambition and colonialist strive by Napoleon Bonaparte
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, and then brutally repressed by the wave of the Restoration
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, the poetic mood shifted towards irony (and sometimes overt sarcasm) or direct criticism: in their works, the young poets of the second Romantic generation often gave voice to a deep disillusionment and to a sharp criticism of political power.
George Gordon Byron gave shape to an individualistic and rebellious hero and played with historic characters and events by means of a quite irreverent attitude, thus allowing his readers to see them from an "unofficial" point of view.
Percy Bysshe Shelley was more overt in his political commitment: his criticism of the obtuse brutality that lies behind repression went together with a strenuous strive towards justice and social equality. Poetry and poets were thus given the fundamental role of enhancing individual and social consciousness and of promoting a new model of society.
John Keats' escape into idealised Middle Ages and resorting to classical ideals as a measure of beauty hid the strenuous will of mending the political and social aberrations of the early Industrial Era.