Richard Jago's The Genius Of The Gothic Age

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After Sanderson Miller creates his Gothic sham ruin at Radway Grange at Edgehill, many nobles and lords come to celebrate the style. The text highlights a poem of the the “Genius of the Gothic Age” by Richard Jago and also sums up the thoughts on Gothic ruin shams through the phrase “Distrust, Barbarity, and Gothic Rule (Stewart, 403).” What’s interesting is the fact that everyone loves this style because it represents everything that was wrong with England at a past time and what they strive not to do. Usually, we see styles rise because they want to return to a glorified time, such as the Renaissance, or that the style represents a positive and celebrated way of thinking at the time. However, Gothic sham ruins are used to mock and criticize a past time and threaten anyone that might sympathize with it. Many use it as to show how they defeated the past wrong way of doing things. Usually when a new school of thought takes hold, we see the emergence of a brand new style, and using an outdated style, no matter how ruined, was not progressive or practical. …show more content…

He recognizes the fact that the Gothic style simply lived during the medieval ages and was not the cause of the political tyranny, church corruption, or superstition. I enjoyed this thoughts on the current attitude towards Gothic of the time - his has delightful enrichment for the imagination but taking it too seriously only offers up jargon. Additionally, reading this thoughts on the response to the criticism that Gothic was an outdated way of thinking was because it was from an older time. He talks about the fact that as we progress, things get older so institutions will evolve and learn over time. Overall, Walpole identified the potential for Gothic style to be used in a new way not just in the 18th century style, but in a new way that went against the repetitive

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