The works of Charles Dickens, for example, typically centered on an idealized, Romantic-style love affair, and featured grotesque villains and Gothic-style settings, such as the titular manor in “Bleak House.” One of the most famous Victorian novels, Emily Bronte’s “Wuthering Heights,” displays a seamless interweaving of the Romantic and gothic. The influence of Romanticism and gothic horror peaked in the 1850s, when elements from both genres had become almost standard tropes in popular literature. This competition yielded two classic works of Gothic horror in Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein” and Polidori’s “The Vampyre,” which took inspiration for its titular character from Byron’s unfinished “Augustus Darvell.” Other English Romantics who utilized tropes from gothic horror include Samuel Coleridge, whose “Christabel” and “Rime of the Ancient Mariner” contain Gothic elements, and John Keats, whose “Isabella, or the Pot of Basil” features a ghost, a beheading and the exhumation of a corpse. Lord Byron, perhaps the pre-eminent author of Romantic verse, in 1816 organized a ghost story competition between himself, Percy and Mary Shelley, and John William Polidori. Many prominent Romantic writers rendered works of gothic horror. Elements of Gothic fiction are prevalent in several of the acknowledged classics of 19th-century literature, including Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818), Nathaniel Hawthorne's The House of the Seven Gables (1851), Charlotte Bront's Jane Eyre (1847), Victor Hugo's The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1831 in French), and many of the tales written by Edgar Allan Poe such as 'The Murders in the Rue Morgue (1841) and 'The Tell-Tale Heart' (1843). Romantic works such as the poetry of William Blake and Alfred, Lord Tennyson displayed a fascination with the supernatural also apparent in gothic horror.
The Romantic, Byronic hero equates to the brooding gothic villain in that both figures are tortured souls placed at the center of action. Gothic horror sought to instill a pleasing sort of terror and thrill from its emphasis on taboo subjects, such as satanism and matters of the occult, that both fascinated and repelled polite English society. Gothic horror functions as an extension of the Romantic notion of literary pleasure, that literature should inspire deeply felt emotional responses. Horace Walpole is credited with inventing the gothic genre in his 1764 novel “The Castle of Otranto.” Walpole sought to combine the newly popular elements of Romantic literature - fanciful settings, a heroine, outsized love and sorrow - with ominous, supernatural elements. Gothic fiction also drew inspiration from medieval literature, from the use of castles as a setting, to the presence of magic and supernatural villains. Gothicism-and some critics have seen almost the whole of Ameri- can writing as a Gothic literature-differences in. Early Romanticists drew much of their inspiration from medieval romances such as “Tristan und Isolde” and “Sir Orfeo,” with their basis in Arthurian myth. Romanticism developed in the mid-18th century as a reaction against Enlightenment-era Neoclassicism and its emphasis on reason, rationality and order.