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Thomas de Quincey (essays, criticism, biography) Thomas Chatterton (poetry) Ebenezer Elliot (Poet Activist) William Hazlitt (criticism, essays) John Keats (poetry) Charles Lamb (poetry, essays) Mary Shelley (novels) Percy Bysshe Shelley (poetry) Robert Southey (poetry, biography) J. M. W. Turner (painting) William Wordsworth (poetry) Dorothy ...
Literature and Belief: English Institute Essays, 1957 (1957) editor ISBN 978-0-231-02278-1; A Glossary of Literary Terms (Geoffrey Harpham, 1957; 9th ed. 2009) ISBN 978-1-4130-3390-8; English Romantic Poets: Modern Essays in Criticism (1960) ISBN 978-0-19-501946-9; The Norton Anthology of English Literature (1962) founding editor, many later ...
The six best-known English male authors are, [citation needed] in order of birth and with an example of their work: William Blake – The Marriage of Heaven and Hell; William Wordsworth – The Prelude
William Wordsworth (pictured) and Samuel Taylor Coleridge helped to launch the Romantic Age in English literature in 1798 with their joint publication Lyrical Ballads. In English literature, the key figures of the Romantic movement are considered to be the group of poets including William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, John Keats, Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley and the much older ...
The Romantic movement in English literature of the early 19th century has its roots in 18th-century poetry, the Gothic novel and the novel of sensibility. [6] [7] This includes the pre-Romantic graveyard poets from the 1740s, whose works are characterized by gloomy meditations on mortality, "skulls and coffins, epitaphs and worms". [8]
Essays of Four Decades is a 1967 essay collection by the American writer Allen Tate. It is divided into five sections. It is divided into five sections. The first consists on texts about modern poetry in general.
The Return of Eden: Five Essays on Milton's Epics; Fools of Time: Studies in Shakespearean Tragedy; The Modern Century; A Study of English Romanticism; The Stubborn Structure: Essays on Criticism and Society; The Bush Garden: Essays on the Canadian Imagination; The Critical Path: An Essay on the Social Context of Literary Criticism
German Romanticism, which followed closely after the late development of German classicism, emphasized an understanding and beauty of fragmentation that can appear startlingly modern to the reader of English literature, and valued Witz – that is, "wit" or "humor" of a certain sort – more highly than the serious Anglophone Romanticism.