After reading some of Simón Bolívar's most historically substantial writings, I wondered why his opinions, visions, and accounts were included under the general term of Romanticism; why I read his works in the context of "The Romantic Century." As a child of Enlightenment, Bolívar should, theoretically, have a proclivity to lead with reason, control, and empirical truths. He does embrace the models and ideals of eminent Enlightenment thinkers such as Montesquieu, when he quotes Montesquieu's notion that slavery is more easily implemented than it is abolished as a truth evident in, "every period in history" (p.23 "The Jamaica Letter"). "The Jamaica Letter," written by Bolívar was an attempt to disillusion the receiver and inform him of the honest conditions of the lands that made up Latin America. Bolívar uses truthful cases, sharp reason, and articulate arguments to recommend the freedom and human rights of the peoples of Latin America and the creation of a large nation state. He focuses on the superior potential of South American resources whose range is hampered by Spanish control and lack of participation by natives. However, what is included in Bolívar's letter are inflections of sound passion and fervor, which are sometimes manifested in hyperbolic accounts and sermonic metaphors showing Bolívar's untrammeled vehemence. He suggests that,
"That wicked stepmother is the source of all our suffering. The veil has been rent, and now we can see the light; now she wants to return us to darkness. The chains have been broken, we've been liberated, and now our enemies want to make us slaves" (p.13 "The Jamaica Letter").
Moreover, Bolívar authenticates his ardor and strong emotion when he writes "Mi Delirio sobre el Chimborazo."

Not only are his compulsive feelings redolent with Romanticism, but Bolívar is prophesizing from the tallest peak in Ecuador. A sublime image in itself, Chimborazo is the setting of Bolívar's confused discourse with celestial powers. He writes, "Wrapped in this mantle...I have traversed the infernal regions, crossed river and seas, climbed the shoulders of the Andes. Under the feet of Colombia, the Earth has flattened itself," but goes on to write, "...as I touched with my head the pinnacle of the firmament and saw at my feet a yawing abyss, I fell in a swoon" ("Mi Delirio sobre el Chimborazo"). Though Bolívar confronts Earth's natural elements, he also clearly demonstrates his mere mortality. The structure of this piece is one of disorder and excitement. Uncommon in pieces of the Enlightenment, "Mi Delirio sobre el Chimborazo" is written as an uncontrolled and compulsive stream of Bolívar's experiences and thoughts, which differs greatly from Bolívar's tight political statements in his Jamaica Letter.
Image from Wikipedia