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E-raamat: Leigh Hunt: Selected Writings

  • Formaat: 256 pages
  • Sari: Fyfield Books
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Nov-2003
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781136774072
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  • Formaat: 256 pages
  • Sari: Fyfield Books
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Nov-2003
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781136774072
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Leigh Hunt (1784-1859) was a prolific, versatile and engaging writer. He outlived many of the poets and essayists of his generation whose reputations overshadowed his, but Coleridge, Wordsworth, Shelley and Keats all owed a debt to his advocacy, as did Tennyson and Browning. A poet of charm and technical skill, and an able translator and playwright, Leigh Hunt excelled as an essayist, literary critic and letter writer. His concern was always, in the words of his son, to 'open more widely the door of the library', to share his literary enthusiasms and extend his readers' tastes. This anthology draws on the full range of Hunt's poetry and prose, revealing a writer committed to the humane and civilizing powers of literature and friendship.

Arvustused

A misunderstood Romantic "...a lively collection of specialised studies..." -- J.C.C. Mays, The Irish Times

Biographical Introduction 7(11)
Selected Bibliography 11(2)
POETRY
From the Preface to The Story of Rimini
13(6)
From The Story of Rimini
19(27)
To Hampstead
46(1)
Description of Hampstead
46(1)
To the Grasshopper and the Cricket
47(1)
On a Lock of Milton's Hair
47(1)
The Nile
48(1)
To T.L.H.
49(1)
To a Lady who wished to see him
50(1)
(from the French of Clement Marot) Song (from the French of Clement Marot)
51(1)
From Captain Sword and Captain Pen
51(4)
From the Autobiography
55(2)
The Fish, the Man, and the Spirit
57(2)
Abou Ben Adhem
59(1)
Rondeau
59(1)
From A Rustic Walk and Dinner
60(2)
To Charles Dickens
62(1)
On the Death of His Son Vincent
63(1)
PROSE
From `What is Poetry'
64(7)
From the Preface to Stories in Verse
71(17)
From the Autobiography: Coleridge
88(4)
From Table Talk: Charles Lamb
92(19)
From Lord Byron and Some of His Contemporaries
Lord Byron
94(5)
Mr Shelley
99(5)
Mr Keats
104(7)
From The Examiner: Adonais
111(8)
From a review of Tennyson's Poems (1842)
119(35)
From The Examiner
Rules for the Conduct of Newspaper Editors
128(5)
Distressed Seamen
133(4)
Cause of the Inferiority of Parliament
137(4)
I and We
141(5)
From The Indicator
A Now: descriptive of a hot day
146(3)
A Now: descriptive of a cold day
149(5)
LETTERS
To Marianne Kent
154(2)
To Marianne Hunt
156(3)
To Mr Ives, head jailer
159(6)
From the Autobiography
160(5)
To John Keats
165(1)
To P. B. Shelley
166(3)
To Joseph Severn
169(1)
To P.B. Shelley
170(3)
To Horace Smith
173(1)
From T.B. Macaulay
174(1)
From Leigh Hunt's Journal
174(1)
To Thomas Moore
175(1)
To B.W. Proctor
176(1)
To B.W. Proctor
177(3)
To Mr and Mrs Browning
180(3)
LEIGH HUNT AS SEEN BY CONTEMPORARIES
William Hazlitt
183(1)
Thomas Carlyle
184(2)
Nathaniel Hawthorne
186(1)
Charles Dickens: from Bleak House
187(1)
John Forster
188(1)
Charles Dickens
189(1)
Notes 190
David Jesson-Dibley was the Head of English at Christs Hospital School before his retirement. He subsequently became a freelance lecturer in English literature, chiefly for the Extra-Mural Department of London University. He is a longstanding member of the Friends of S.T. Coleridge.