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History and Anthology of English Literature

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Title: History and Anthology of English Literature


1
History and Anthology of English Literature
  • Mickey Xu

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3
  • The Romantic Period
  • Historical background Industrial Revolution
    French Revolution
  • Thomas Paines The Right of Man was banned
    and he fled to France to escape the trail by the
    British government.

4
  • Romanticism It refers to a European
    intellectual and artistic movement of the late
    eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries that
    sought greater freedom of personal expression
    than that allowed by the strict rules of literary
    form and logic of the eighteenth-century
    neoclassicists. The Romantics preferred emotional
    and imaginative expression to rational analysis.
    They considered the individual to be at the
    center of all experience and so placed him or her
    at the center of their art. The Romantics
    believed that the creative imagination reveals
    nobler truths unique feelings and attitudes
    than those that could be discovered by logic or
    by scientific examination. Both the natural world
    and the state of childhood were important sources
    for revelations of "eternal truths."

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  • The First Generation of Romanticist PoetsI. Lake
    Poets The first generation of Romantics include
    Wordsworth, Coleridge and Southey. They were also
    called Lake Poets because they had lived for a
    time in close association in the mountainous Lake
    District in the northwest of England. They are
    regarded as one group also because of their
    community of literary and social outlook. They
    traversed the same path in politics and in
    poetry, beginning as radicals and closing as
    conservatives.

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  • II. William WordsworthlifeWilliam Wordsworth
    was born April 7, 1770, in Cockermouth,
    Cumberland(a shire). The next year he met
    Coleridge, and the three of them grew very close,
    the two men meeting daily in 1797-98 to talk
    about poetry and to plan Lyrical Ballads, which
    came out in 1798. The three friends travelled to
    Germany that fall, a trip that produced
    intellectual stimulation for Coleridge and
    homesickness for Wordsworth. After their return,
    William and Dorothy settled in his beloved Lake
    district, near Grasmere.Durham University
    granted him an honorary Doctor of Civil Law
    degree in 1838, and Oxford conferred the same
    honor the next year. When Robert Southey died in
    1843, Wordsworth was named Poet Laureate. He died
    in 1850, and his wife published the much-revised
    Prelude that summer.

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  • works ?Lyrical Ballads In 1789, Wordsworth
    and Coleridge jointly published the Lyrical
    Ballads.
  • The Preface of the Lyrical Ballads The
    manifesto of the English Romantic Movement in
    poetry.

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  • His short lyrics I Wandered Lonely as a
    CloudIntimations of ImmortalityLines
    Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern AbbeyThe
    Solitary ReaperThe Prelude autobiographical,
    in 14 books, the spiritual record of the poets
    mind.

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  • Style ?Simplicity, vivid imagery, directness
    of language, and unadorned beauty.?Wonderful
    descriptions of nature, Nature Poet.

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Byron(1788--1824)
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  • Byron(1788--1824)
  • Life
  • born on 22 January 1788 in London. At the
    age of 11 he inherited the title Lord Byron from
    his uncle and he went back to England. He was
    handsome but born with a misformed foot, which
    probably affected his disposition.He was
    compared to a roaring lion.In 1809, he started a
    tour around the Europe and the East. He went
    through Portugal, Spain, the Mediterranean,
    Turkey, Albania, Asia Minor. The result was his
    Childe Harolds Pilgrimage, a great success.In
    1815, he got married. During his tour in Europe,
    he befriended Shelly who infulenced Byrons later
    works.After the death of Shelly, he went to
    Greece to help the Greeks win their liberty.

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  • Works
  • Long narrative and dramatic poems Childe
    Harolds Pilgrimage a long poem of four cantos,
    written in Spenserian stanza. This poem tells of
    Childes travel in Europe.Don Juan It was
    written in Italy Lyrics When We Two Parted
    She Walks in Beauty

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Summary
  • Byron wrote this poem the morning after he had
    met his beautiful young cousin by marriage, Mrs.
    Robert John Wilmot.
  • The poet admires the womans beauty.

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  • Don Juan Byrons masterpiece
  • It was written in Italy during the years
    1818---1823. It is 16,000 lines long, in 16
    cantos, and was in ottava rima, each stanza
    containing 8 iambic pentameter lines rhymed
    abababcc.
  • The story takes place in the latter part of the
    18th century. Don Juan, its hero, is a Spanish
    youth of noble birth. The poem tells about the
    vicissitudes of his life and his adventures.

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  • Percy Bysshe Shelley

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  • Percy Bysshe Shelley
  • Life
  • He was born in 1792. His father was a
    conservative and narrow-minded country gentleman.
  • Before he was 18, he had written two romances
    and published a collection of poems?
  • At 19, he married with a 16 year-old girl. The
    marriage was hasty and unsuitable, because she
    could not share his ideas. In 1814, they
    divorced.
  • He went to Ireland in 1812 and published in
    Dublin his Address to the Irish People.
  • In 1816, Shelley married Mary Goldwin.

18
  • works
  • Queen Mab
  • The Revolt of Islam a long poem in 1818.
  • Prometheus Unbound his masterpiece, a lyrical
    drama in 4 acts.
  • The Masque of Anarchy a political lyric.
  • Lyrics on Nature and Love
  • Ode to the West Wind.
  • To a Skylark
  • Loves Philosophy.
  • A Defence of Poetry Poetry, so far from
    being deteriorated and made powerless by the
    advance of civilization, is actually the
    indispensable agent of civilization.

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  • John KeatsLife---He was born in 1795 in
    London. His father was a stable keeper.
  • ---Before he was 15, both of his parents
    died and he started to be an apprentice to a
    surgeon.---He made friends with Leigh Hunt,
    Hazlitt and Shelley in London and published some
    poems. His first collection of poems was
    published under the help of Shelley.---In 1818
    he started on a walking tour through England and
    Scotland, during which he witnessed the poverty
    and privations of the people. ---Keats also
    lived in poverty. When looking after his brother
    who was badly ill, Keats was stricken with the
    same illness.---Keats fell in love with a young
    lass Fanny Browne but could not marry her on
    account of his poverty and illness.---Shelley
    invited Keats to come to Italy for medical
    treatment. But shortly after his arrival in Rome
    he died in 1821.

20
  • Works long poems
  • EndymionIsabellaThe Eve of St.
    AgnesLamiaHyperrion unfinishedShort poems
  • Ode to AutumnOde on MelancholyOde in a
    Grecian UrnOde to a Nightingale( the best)
  • His Principle Beauty in truth, truth in
    beauty

21
  • Some Women Writers (Jane Austen, the Bronte
    sisters, Mrs. Gaskell and Gorge Eliot)
  • Among the distinguished English novelists of
    the 19th century are several women. Women
    novelists began to appear in England during the
    second half of the 18th century. But some gifted
    women of the 19th century made such contributions
    to the development of the English novel that they
    have justifiably won their places in the front
    ranks of the brilliant realists headed by Dickens
    and Thackeray. These remarkable women novelists
    are Jane Austen, the Bronte sisters, Mrs. Gaskell
    and Gorge Eliot.

22
  • Jane Austen (1775--1817)
  • --lived and worked at the turn of the
    century.
  • --daughter of a country clergyman, passed all
    her life in doing small domestic duties in the
    countryside.
  • --refused to acknowledge that she was the
    author of her novels, which were published
    anonymously owing to the prejudice prevailing at
    the time concerning the writing of novels by a
    lady.
  • --living a quiet life in the countryside, she
    kept her eyes steadily upon the people and
    incidents about her, and wrote about the small
    world she lived in.

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  • Pride and Prejudice

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  • Work
  • --six novels
  • Northanger Abbey
  • Sense and Sensibility
  • Pride and Prejudice (the most widely read
    among them)
  • Mansfield Park
  • Emma
  • Persuasion

26
  • ThemesTheme is the fundamental and often
    universal idea explored in a literary work. The
    term is used interchangeably with thesis.
  • ---Love---Reputation

27
  • Analysis of Major Characters
  • Elizabeth Bennet
  • she is lovely, clever. Nevertheless, her
    sharp tongue and tendency to make hasty judgments
    often lead her astray.
  • Fitzwilliam Darcy
  • Intelligent and forthright, he too has a
    tendency to judge too hastily and harshly, and
    his high birth and wealth make him overly proud
    and overly conscious of his social status.

28
  • Charles Lamb(1775--1834)
  • Life ?a lifelong friend of Coleridge, and an
    admirer and defender of the poetic creed of
    Wordsworth.
  • ?But while the romantic poets were
    interested in nature and country life, Charles
    Lamb felt more at home in the city than in the
    wild nature. He passed all his days in London.
  • He showed us a romantic imagination which
    can find its stimulus not only in nature and in
    country life but also in society and people.
  • ?He is considered as the finest familiar
    essayist in England. (The familiar essay is
    characterized by its relaxed style, its
    conventional tone, and its wide range of subject
    matter. )

29
  • Works
  • Tales from Shakespeare (1818)
  • Specimens of English Dramatic Poets
    Contemporary with Shakespeare(1808) Essays of
    Elia (1820)
  • Last Essays of Elia

30
  • Features
  • He is a humorist and a master of puns and jokes,
    which abounds in his essays.
  • He is fond of old writers. His writings are full
    of archaisms.
  • His essays are intensely personal.
  • His romanticism is different from Wordsworths.
    He was a romanticist of city, and his imagination
    was inspired by the busy life of London.

31
  • Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832), Scottish writer
    and poet and one of the greatest historical
    novelists.

32
  • Works
  • He is regarded as the founder and great master of
    the historical novel.
  • 1).the group of novels on the history of
    Scotland Waverley (1814), Guy Mannering (1815),
    Old Morality (1816), Rob Roy (1817)
  • 2). The group of novels on English History
    Ivanhoe (1819), famous for the realistic
    description of the life of feudal England.
  • 3). The group of novels on the history of
    European countries
  • Quentin Durward (1823)
  • St. Ronans Wells (1823) the only novel of
    Scotts which deals with his contemporary life.

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  • His influence
  • Scotts historical novels combine a romantic
    atmosphere with a realistic description of
    historical background, thus paving the way for
    some of the best works of Dickens and Thackery.
    In fact, his literary career marks the transition
    from romanticism to realism in English literature
    of the 19th century.
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