During the Industrial Revolution an intellectual and artistic hostility towards the new industrialisation developed. This was known as the Romantic movement. Its major exponents in English included the artist and poet
William Blake and poets
William Wordsworth,
Samuel Taylor Coleridge,
John Keats,
Byron and
Percy Bysshe Shelley. The movement stressed the importance of "nature" in art and language, in contrast to 'monstrous' machines and factories; the "Dark satanic mills" of Blake's poem
And did those feet in ancient time.
Mary Shelley's short story
Frankenstein reflected concerns that scientific progress might be two-edged.
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