Answer :

Yetzeira
 feelings, emotions, and imagination take priority over logic and facts ("Anything you want you can have if you only want it enough." cf. romance narrative)
 belief in children's innocence and wisdom; youth as a golden age; adulthood as corruption and betrayal
 nature as beauty and truth, esp. the sense of nature as the sublime (god-like awesomeness mixing ecstatic pleasure mixed with pain, beauty mixed with terror)
 heroic individualism; the individual separate from the masses
 "outsiders" as representatives of special worth excluded by rigid societies or irrational norms
 nostalgia for the past
 desire or will as personal motivation
 intensification, excess, and extremes (see Romantic rhetoric)
 common people idealized as dependable source of true common sense and sentiment
 idealized or abstract settings; characters as symbolic types
 the Gothic as nightmare world of intense emotions and complex psychology