Some Features of Victorian Poetry:
- Aural and musical: derives from oral culture—songs, hymns, ballads, recitations, public readings, private family readings; music as popularly experienced in parlor performances and church singing.
Lines and stanzas are arranged in a series of repeats and variations / alternations of stressed and unstressed syllables and passages
- Pictorial—word painting, imagery, influenced by Romantics, Pre-Raphaelites
- Colorful and detailed descriptions—age of realism, photography, tendency to see beauty in exactitute and detail (age of scientific advances)
- Receptive to features also found in other genres—novels, serial fiction, fairy tales, drama, newspapers, argumentative or meditative essays
- Embedded in issues of time--women’s sexuality, double gender standard, poverty, war, class inequities, issues of meaning and spirituality, scientific ideas, technology
- Circulated in many forms, more available as century progressed—broadsides, cheap reprints, periodicals, books; the latter were often illustrated and given as gift books on special occasions
Intended to amuse, please, entertain, and prompt reflection