The Penguin book of romantic poetry:
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Format: | Buch |
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Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
London [u.a.]
Penguin
2005
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Schriftenreihe: | Penguin classics
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Klappentext |
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Beschreibung: | XLVIII, 1005 S. |
ISBN: | 0140435689 9780140435689 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | -GONTIMTS
PREFACE mm -.- ..-,,/ ■,;J;ri: ■ ■ --.-,:-, ..--
:;THl aO:M^NTi€ PERIOTD xxvii
(i) Revolution and Romantic Vision xxwi
2. UtelsmaH«icPoem!a€biitext xxx
(iii) The Second Generation jdi
(rv) The Smse of an Ending xWi
THE P
Z Romantic HaUmarks^3
1. CHABiiOTfE StoTJff: #0 & iSircrfft Downs {Elegiac Sonnets
3. Robert Burns: To a Mountain Daisy (1786) 5
3. mart KOBINSON: ^ London Summer Morning (ijg4; pub! 1804) 7
4. SAM^lt TAYtOR coaBRid©E: Jf^^ J^»(No^U797;ptj^l. iSie)1 8
5. charms lamb: Old Familiar Faces (1798) 10
6. wiLEtfsc|w@R®swoRJ*Jffi: Lmisy fomits (*iaiir if98-9; pubt Lytical
(ii) Strange Fits of Passion I He
(in) She Dwelt Among the <U%tn
we Known
. (c Dec.) 13
(iv) A Slumber Did My Spirit Si
M Three Tears She Grew (Feb.
) *5
4h :: ■- ■
7. THOMAS CAMPBELL: HokmUtii
Sb;(i8oi;
puHLiktg) 16
8. ROBERT soutthsy: f& Inchc^
M 17
9. William bla«e: AndDidThos
>2-4;eagravedilli
c. ]iG8f 19
10. Waltbr^ SCOW: Lochinvar(Mt
trmibn 181
e>8^ a©
11. THOMAS MOO RE: 0&/MM»e JVi
^fi8io* 21
/()
12. lord byron: B^vdiy by Nigbt* (Childe HaroldM, stmas l©-l8,
13. john Keats: To Autumn (Sept/1819; ptibl. i8ad) ^5
VH1 CONTENTS
14. peecy bysshe sHEtLEY: To a Skylark (1820) 26
15. james hogg: When, the Kye Gomes Home (1823) 29
16. john clare: The Shepherd s Calendar (July, 90-131) c. 1824; publ.
1827 31
17. thomas hood: I Remember, I Remember (1826) 32
18. Felicia hemans: Casabianca (1824; pubL 1826) 33
19. letitia Elizabeth landon: Lines ofLife (1829) 35
20. Caroline Norton: My Arab Steed (1830) 38
21. james leigh hunt: Abou Ben Adhem (1834) 39
//. Narratives of Love 40
1. mary robinson: from Sappho andPhaon (1796) 41
2. William Wordsworth: The Ruined Cottage (1797-8; Excursion
1814 from MS 1968) 52
3. samuel taylor Coleridge: Love (Nov. 1799; publ. 1817) 64
4. WILLIAM BLAKE:
(i) The Crystal Cabinet (c. 1803; from MS 1905) 67.
(ii) The Mental Traveller (c. 1803; from MS 1905) 68
5. mary tighe: A Glimpse of Love (Psyche I, stanzas 16-32) 1802-3;
publ. 1805 71
6. thomas Campbell: Gertrude of Wyoming II (1809) 76
7. lord byron: The Bride of Abydos (stanzas 22-7) 1814 82
8. percy bysshe shelley: Alastor (lines 140-222) 1816 87
9. james leigh hunt: Paulo and Francesca (Rimini III, lines 482-
564) 1816 89
10. thomas moore: The Fire-Worshippers (from Latta Rookh III, lines
201-453)1817 92
11. john keats: The Eve of St Agnes (Jan.-Feb. 1819; publ. 1820) 99
12. lord byron: Juan and Haidee (from Don Juan II-IV) 1819-21 110
13. letitia Elizabeth landon: The Indian Bride (Improvisatrice
1823) 129
14. felicia hemans: Arabella Stuart (Records of Woman 1828) 131
15. Caroline Norton: The Faithless Knight (1830) 138
///. Romantic Solitude, Suffering and Endurance 140
1. William cowper: Crazy Kate (Task 1,534-56) 1785 141
2. joanna baillie: The Storm-Beat Maid (1790) 142
3. charlotte smith: The Female Exile (Nov. 1792; publ. 1797) 147
4. William blake: Visions of the Daughters of Albion (1793) 148
5. Robert southey: Mary the Maid of the Inn (1797) 154
6. William wordsworth: Wordsworthian Solitaries
(i) Old Man Travelling (May 1797; Lyrical Ballads 1798) 157
(ii) The Discharged Soldier (Feb. 1798; publ. 1850/from MS
1970) 157
: CONTENTS
(iii) The Mad Mother {Lyrical Ballads 1798) 163
(iv) Complaint of a Forsaken Indian Woman (Lyrical Ballads
1798) 164
(v) Michael (lines 217-490) Lyrical Ballads 1S00 167
(vi) The Leech-Gatherer (spring 1802; publ. 1807) 173
(vii) The London Beggar (1805 Prelude VII, 594-632) publ. 1850/
from MS 1926 177
7. samuel taylor Coleridge: Alone, Alone
(i) The Ancient Mariner (Lyrical Ballads 1798) 178
(ii) Pains of Sleep (Sept 1803; publ. 1816) 197
8. thomas Campbell: Lord Uttih s Daughter (1809) 199
g. mary bryan: The Visit (lines 45-126) 1815 200
10. lord byron: The Prisoner ofGhillon (1816) 202
11. john keats: Isabella, or The Pot of Basil (stanzas 32-63) April
1818; publ. 1820 212
12. percy bysshe shelley: Final Moments (The CenciV, scenes
iii-iv) 1819 220
13. lord byron: The Shipwreck (from Don Juan II) 1819 228
14. thomas hood: The Dream of Eugene Aram (1826) 234
15. felicia hemans: Indian Woman s Death Song (Records of Woman
1828) 240
16. letitia Elizabeth landon: She Sat Alone Beside Her Hearth
(c. 1835; publ. 1839) 242
IV. Ennobling Interchange: Man and Mature 246
1. ANNA LAETITIA BARBAULD:
(i) The Mouse s Petition (1773) 248
(ii) from A Summer s Evening s Meditation (lines 17-98)
1773 250
2. william cowper: The Winter Evening (Task IV, 267-332)
1785 252
3. robert burns: ToaMouse, On Turning Her Up in Her Nest with
the Plough, November 1785 (1786) 254
4. samuel taylor Coleridge: Conversation Poems
(i) The EoUan Harp (20 Aug. 1795; publ. 1796) 255
(ii) This Lime-Tree Bower, My Prison (July 1797; publ. 1800) 257
(iii) Frost at Midnight (Feb. 1798; publ. 1798) 259
(iv) The Nightingale (May 1798; publ. Lyrical BaUads) 261
5. william Wordsworth: Images of a Mighty Mind
(i) Tintem Abbey (13 July 1798; publ. Lyrical BaUads) 264
(ii) There Was a Boy (Oct. 1798; publ. Lyrical Ballads 1800) 268
(iii) The Two-Part Prelude (Oct. 1798-Dec. 1799; publ. 1850/from
MS 1972) 269
(iv) Statue Horse (Feb. 1804; from MS 1969) 292
(v) Climbing of Snowdon (1805 Prelude XIII, 10-73) Feb. 1804;
publ. 1850/from MS 1926 393
(vi) Crossing the Alps (1805 Prelude VI, 494-572) March 1804;
publ. 1850/from MS 1926 294
6. William lisle bowles: from Coombe EUen (1798) 296
7. charlotte smith: Beachy Head (lines 346-505) c. 1805; publ.
1807 297
8. Amelia owe: Stanzas Written Under Aeolus Harp (1808) 300
9. Isabella lickbakrow: On Esthwaite Water (1814) 301
10. lord byron: Concentred in a life Intense
(i) Lake Leman (from Ghilde Harold III) June 1816; publ.
Dec. 1817 303
(ii) Epistle to Augusta (July 1816; publ. 1830) 306
11. percy bysshe shelley: The Secret Strength of Things
(i) Mont Blanc (July 1816; publ. 1817) 310
(ii) To Jane: The Invitation (2 Feb. 1822; publ. 1824) 313
(iii) To Jane: A Recollection (Feb. 1822; publ. 1824) 315
12. john keats: A Sort of Oneness
(i) Endymion (1,777-802) c. April 1817; publ. 1818 317
(ii) Epistle toj. H. Reynolds (lines 82-105) March 1818; publ.
1848 318
13. samuel palmer: Twilight Time (lines 1-24) c. 1827; from MS
1942 319
14. john clare: This Leaning Tree with Ivy Overhung (early 1830s;
from MS 1979) 320
15. Felicia hemans: Remembrance of Nature (1835; publ. 1838) 321
16. LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON:
(i) Scale Force, Cumberland (c. 1836; publ. 1839) 322
(ii) Fountains Abbey (c. 1836; publ. 1839) 323
V. Romantic Odes 324
1. Robert burns: Despondency, An Ode (1786) 325
2. William Wordsworth: The Immortality Ode (spring 1802/
Feb. 1804; publ. 1807) 327
3. samuel taylor Coleridge: Dejection: An Ode (summer 1802;
publ. 4 Oct.) 332
4. Percy bysshe shelley: Hymn to Intellectual Beauty (July 1816;
publ. Jan. 1817) 336
5. JOHN keats: Odes of Spring 1819 (publ. 1820)
(i) Ode to Psyche (late April) 339
(ii) Ode to a Nightingale (early May) 341
(iii) Ode on a Grecian Urn (May) 343 .
(iv) Ode on Melancholy (May) 344
(v) Ode on Indolence (late May) 345
CONTENTS
6. peecy bysshe shelley: Ode to the West Wind (Oct. 1819; publ.
1820) 347
VI. Romantic Lyric and Song 351
1. William blake: Song ( How sweet I roamed ) Poetical Sketches
1783 354
2. ROBERT BURNS: SongS 1786-93
(i) It Was upon a Lammas Night (1786) 355
(ii) The Banks o Doon (March 1791; publ. 1808) 356
(iii) A Red Red Rose (collected 1793; publ. 1794) 357
3. William blake: from Songs of Innocence (1784-9; engraved 1789)
(i) Introduction 358
(ii) The Shepherd 358
(iii) Infant Joy 359
(iv) The Echoing Green 359
(v) Laughing Song (May 1784) 360
(vi) Nurse s Song (c. 1784) 360
(vii) Holy Thursday (c. 1784) 361
(viii) The Lamb 361
(ix) The Chimney Sweeper 362
(x) The Divine Image 363
4. susanna blamire: 363
(i) The SiUer Grown (1790; publ. 1842) 363
(ii) Oh Bid Me Not to Wander (c. 1792; publ. 1842) 364
5. William blake: from Songs of Experience (1791-2; engraved 1794)
(i) Introduction (c. 1794) 365
(ii) Earth s Answer (c. 1794) 365
(iii) My Pretty Rose Tree 366
(iv) The Gbd and the Pebble 366
(v) The Garden of Love 367
(vi) A Poison Tree 367
(vii) Infant Sorrow 368
(viii) London 368
(ix) Nurse s Song 369
(x)TheTyger 369
(xi) The Human Abstract 370
(xii) The Sick Rose 371
(xiii) The Chimney Sweeper 371
(xiv) Holy Thursday 371
(xv) The My 372,
(xvi) Ah! Sun-Mower (written c. 1794) 373
6. ann batten cristall: Through Springtime Walks
(1795) 373
7. mary robinson: A Thousand Torments (1797) 374
8. Thomas Campbell: Written on Visiting a Scene in Argykshire
(c. 1798; publ. 1800) 375
9. WILLIAM WORDSWORTH:
I. Alfoxden Lyric (1798; publ. Lyrical Ballads)
Lines Written in Early Spring 376
II. Goshr Lyrics (1798-9; publ. Lyrical Ballads 1800) 377
(i) Two April Mornings 377
(ii) The Fountain 378
in. Grasmere Lyrics (spring 1802; publ. Poems 1807)
(i) To the Cuckoo 381
(ii) The Rainbow 38a
(iii) To H. C, Six Years Old 382
(iv) The Cock is Growing 383
(v) To a Butterfly (Tve watched you ) 383
(vi) I Have Thoughts that Are Fed by the Sun (from MS
1947) 384
(vii) The Sun Has Long Been Set 385
iv. Grasmere Lyrics (1804-5; publ- Poems 1807)
(i) Daffodils (Feb. 1804, expanded c. 1815) 385
(ii) Stepping Westward 386
(iii) The Solitary Reaper 387
10. SAMUKL TAYLOR COLERIDGE: Lyrics 1798-1803
(i) Something Childish, but Very Natural (April 1799; publ.
1800) 388
(ii) The Keepsake (1802) 388
(iii) Answer to a Child s Question (1802) 389
11. thomas moore: Away with this Pouting (1801) 390
12. charlotte smith: A Walk by the Water (1804) 391
13. mary tighe: Address to My Harp (c. 1804; publ. 1811) 391
14. dorothy Wordsworth: A Cottage in Grasmere Vale (c. 1805;
from MS 1882) 393
15. jane taylor: The Star (1806) 394
16. lord byron: Lyrics Early and Late
(i) The Maid of Athens (c. Jan. 1810; publ. 1812) 395
(ii) She Walks in Beauty (June 1814; publ. 1815) 396
(iii) Stanzas for Music ( There be none of Beauty s daughters )
1816 396
(iv) Stanzas for Music ( There s not a joy ) 1816 397
(v) Well Go No MoreA-Roving (28 Feb. 1817; publ. 1830) 397
(vi) The Isles of Greece {Don Juan, Canto III, 86-7) 1821 398
(vii) On This Day I Complete My Thirty-Sixth Year (22 Jan. 1824;
publ. 1824) 400
17. PERCY bysshe shelley: Lyric Poetry 1817-21
(i) To Gonstantia, Singing (late 1817; publ. Jan. 1818) 402
ii CONTENTS
(ii) Stanzas Written in Dejection, December 1818, Near Naples (publ.
1824) 403
(iii) The Cloud (1820) 404
(iv) HeUas: The Last Chorus (Oct. 1821; publ. 1822) 406
(v) Music, When Soft Voices Die (c. 1821; publ. 1824) 408
18. john keats: Lyrics 1818-19
(i) Where Be Ye Going (21 March 1818; publ. 1848) 408
(ii) The Witching Time (14 Oct. 1818; publ. 1848) 409
(iii) I Had a Deve(c. Dec. 1818; publ. 1848) 410
(iv) Hush, Hush! Tread Softly (c. Dec. 1818; publ. 1845) 410
(v) This Living Hand (c. Nov. 1819; &oni MS 1898) 411
19. john clare: Song ( Sad was the day ) 1820 411
20. thomas hood: Ruth (1827) 412
SSI. CHARLES LAMB:
(i) To Louisa Martin, Whom I Used to Call Monkey (1827) #3
(ii) In My Own Album (1829) 4*3
22. letitia Elizabeth landon: Song: My heart is like the feiling
hearth (1827) 414
23. FELICIA HEMANS:
(i) The Graves of a Household (1828) 415
(ii) A Parting Song (1828) 416
24. Caroline Norton: Dreams (1830) 417
25. James hogg: When Maggy Gangs Away (1831) 417
VII. The Romantic Sonnet 419
1. thomas warton: To the River Loden (1777) 421
2. charlotte smith: from Elegiac Sonnets, 1784
(i) The Partial Muse £?&
(ii) Should the Lone Wanderer 422
3. William lisle Bowles: from Fourteen Sonnets, 1789
(i) At a Village in Scotland 423
(ii) To the River Itchin 433
4. SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE:
(i) Pantisocracy (1794) 424
(ii) To the River Otter (1796) 424
5. mary robinson: from Sappho andPhaon (1796)
(i) Sappho s Conjectures 425
(ii) Her Address to the Moon 426
(iii) To Pkaon 426
6. Charles lamb: When Last I Roved (1797) 427
7. Robert southey: To a Brook Near the Village of Gordon
(1797) 427
8. Charles lloyd: On the Death ofPrisciUa Farmer (1797) 428
9. anna seward: By Derwenfs Rapid Stream (1799) 428
XIV CONTENTS
io» mary tighe: Written at Scarborough (1799) 429
11. charlotte smith: from Elegiac Sonnets, 1799
(i) Written at the Ghse of Spring 429
(ii) From the Thirteenth Cantata ofMetastasio 430
(iii) To the Earl ofEgremont 430
12. William wordsworth: Sonnets of 1803 (publ. 1807)
(i) / Grieved for Bonaparte (21 May) 431
(ii) With Ships the Sea Was Sprinkled 431
(iii) Westminster Bridge (3 Sept) 432
(iv) Milton, Thou Shouldst Be Living at this Hour 432
(v) The World Is Too Much with Us 432
(vi) Ere We Had Reached the Wished-for Place (4 Oct.) 433
(mi) Nuns Fret Not 433
(viii) Scorn Not the Sonnet (c. 1802; publ. 1827) 434
13. mary tighe: To Death (c. 1805; publ. 1811) 434
14. JAMES leigh hunt: Sonnets, 1814-18
(i) Written During the Author s Imprisonment, November 1814
{Examiner) 435
(ii) Written in the Spring that Succeeded Imprisonment, May 1813
(Examiner) 435
(iii) On a Lock of Milton s Hair (Jan. 1818, Examiner) 436
15. mary bryan: To My Brother (1815) 436
16. lord byron: Sonnets Written at die Villa Diodati, July 1816
(i) Sonnet on ChiUon (1816) 437
(ii) Sonnet to Lake Leman (1816) 437
17. john keats: Sonnets of 1816-19
(i) On First Looking into Chapman s Homer (Oct. 1816; publ.
Dec.) 438
(ii) Great Spirits Now on Earth are Sojourning (19-20 Nov. 1816;
publ. 1817) 438
(iii) To Mrs Reynolds Gat (16 Jan. 1818; publ. 1830) 439
(iv) On Sitting Down to Read King Lear Once Again (22 Jan. 1818;
publ. 1838) 439
(v) When I Have Fears that I May Cease to Be (late Jan. 1818; publ.
1848) 440
(vi) Bright Star (autumn 1819; publ. 1838) 440
18. Horace smith: In Egypt s Sandy Silence (Dec. 1817; publ. 1
Feb. 1818) 441
19. PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY:
(i) Oisymandias (Dec. 1817; publ. 11 Jan. 1818) 441
(ii) Lift Not the Painted Veil (late 1819; publ. 1824) 442
20. JOHN CLARE:
(i) Give Me the Gloomy Walk (1819-20; publ. 1820) 442
(ii) A Wish (1819-20; publ. 1828) 443
XV CONTENTS
21. william Wordsworth: The River Duddon: Afterthought
(1820) 443
22. samukl taylor Coleridge: To Nature (1820) 444
23. thomas hood: Written in Keats Endymion {London Magazine
1823) 444
24. hartley coLeridge: Long Time a Child (1833) 445
25. Felicia hemans: To a Distant Scene (1834) 445
26. Caroline Norton: Be Frank with Me (1830) 446
27. letitia Elizabeth landon: The Castle qfChillon (1835) 446
VIII. The Gothic and Surreal 447
1. William blake: Fair Elenor {Poetical Sketches 1783) 448
2. helen maria Williams: Part of an Irregular Fragment Found in a
Dark Passage of the Tower (1786) 451
3. robert burns: Tam 0 Shanter (late 1790; publ. 1791) 452
4. GOTTFRIED BURGER (trans. WILLIAM TAYLOR, 1796):
(i)Lenora 459
(ii) The Lass of Fair Wone 466
5. matthew monk lewis: Alonzo the Brave and the Fair Imagine
(1796) 472
6. William wordsworth: The Thorn (March 1798; publ. Lyrical
Ballads) 474
7. samuel taylor Coleridge: Christabel, Part I (April 1798; publ.
1816) 481
8. robert southey: The Old Woman of Berkeley (1799) 488
9. mary robinson: The Haunted Beach (1800) 493
10. walter scott: The Lay of the Last Minstrel (Canto II, stanzas 1-
23) 1805 496
11. james hogg: The Wife ofGrowle (1807) 503
12. george crabbe: Peter Grimes (1810) 505
13. lord byron: Darkness (1816) 514
14. john keats: La Belle Dame Sans Merci (21 April 1819; Indicator,
May 1820) 516
15. john glare: Superstition s Dream (lines 13-68) 1822 518
16. thomas lovell beddoes: The Bride s Tragedy II, scene iv, lines
1-64(1822) 519
17. thomas Campbell: The Last Man (1823) 521
18. thomas hood: The Last Man (1826; publ. 1829) 583
IX. Romantic Comedy and Satire 530
1. William blake: Songs from An Island in the Moon (c. 1784; from
MS 1907)
(i) Old Corruption 532
(ii) Lo, the Bat 533
(iii) Village Cricket 534
2. Robert burns: Holy Willie s Prayer (1786) 534
3. mary robinson: January, 17Q5 (publ. 1796) 538
4. William Wordsworth: Ballad Comedies, Spring 1798:
(i) The Idiot Boy (late March; publ. Lyrical Ballads) 539
(ii) from Peter Bell (late April; publ. 1819) 553
(iii) We Are Seven (late April/early May; publ. Lyrical Ballads) 555
5. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE AND GEORGE CANNING: from The Rovers
(June 1798) 557
6. ROBERT SOUTHEY AND SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE: The Devil s
Thoughts (1799) 559
7. george crabbe: Procrastination (1813) 561
8. james smith: The Baby s Debut, by W. W. (Rejected Addresses
1812) 569
9. james hogg: from The Poetic Mirror (1816)
(i) James Rigg (lines 1-42) 572
(ii) IsabeUe 573
xo. john hookham frere: Irrational Gigantic Anger (Wkistlecraft,
Canto III, stanzas 1-7,15-19) 1818 574
11. john keats: Old Meg She Was a Gypsy (2 July 1818; publ.
1838) 577
12. percy bysshe shelley: Sin (Peter Bell ihe Third IV, 1-65) 1819;
publ. 1839 578
13. lord byron: Juan and Julia (Don Juan I, stanzas 54-117,133-87)
1819 580
14. Robert southey: The Cataract ofLodore (1823) 607
15. thomas love peacock: The Legend of Manor Hall (c; 1824; publ.
1837) 610
16. thomas hood: Mary s Ghost (1826) 614
17. Caroline norton: First Love (1830) 616
X. Protest and Politics 617
1. William cowpkr: Sweet Meat Has Sour Sauce (1788) 619
2. hannah more: from Slavery: A Poem (1788) 620
3. ann yearslky: Death of Luco (from On the Inhumanity of the Slave
Trade) 1788 622
4. anna laetitia barbauld: On the Expected General Rising of ihe
French Nation in rjgs (publ. 1825) 624
5. helen maria Williams: France rjgas (from To DrMoore) 1792 625
6. William wordsworth: The Female Vagrant, stanzas 33-6,40-43
(1793-4; P^L Lyrical Ballads 1798) 626
7. Robert burns: For A That and A That (1795) 629
8. Robert southey: Poems on the Slave Trade (April 1798; publ.
1799) 630
yjj CONTENTS
9. SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE:
(i) France: An Ode (1798) 631
(ii) Dainty Tenns for Fratricide (Fears in Solitude, 90-93,
101-20)1798 633
10. Robert southey: The Battle of Blenheim (1799) 634
11. robert bloomfield: The Farmer s Boy (from Summer) 1801
636
12. WILLIAM WORDSWORTH:
1. Sonnets 1802 (publ. 1807)
(i) On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic 637
(ii) To Toussaint L Ouvertwre 638
(iii) We Had a Fellow-Passenger 638
n. Prelude Scenes from the French Revolution (1804; publ. 1850/
from MS 1926)
(i) Golden Hours : Calais and the Rhone, July 1790 (VI, 352-69,
380-413) 639
(ii) A Tourist s Unconcern: Paris, Dec. 1791 (IX, 40-71) 640
(iii) Among Royalists: Blois, spring 1792 (IX, 127-68) 641
(iv) A Patriot : Blois, early summer 1792 (IX, 294-9* 5*1-34) 642
(v) Sleep No More : Paris, Oct. 1792 (X, 24-82) 643
(vi) War and Alienation: London and Wales, 1793-4
(X, 201-74) 644
(vii) Eternal Justice : Morecambe Sands, Aug. 1794 (X, 466-76,
515-56) 646
13. JOHN CLARE:
(i) Helftstone (lines 95-134) c. 1813; publ. 1820 648
(ii) Lamentations of Round-Oak Waters (lines 157-96) 1818; publ.
1821 649
14. james Leigh hunt: from The St James s Phenomenon
(1814) 650
15. lord byron: Napoleon s Farewell (1814; publ. 1816) 651
16. PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY:
(i) The Mask of Anarchy (Sept. 1819; publ. 1832) 652
(ii) England in 1819 (23 Dec; publ. 1839) 662
17. lord byron: from The Vision of Judgment (1822) 663
18. thomas hood: Ode to H. Bodkin, Esq., Secretary to the Society for
the Suppression of Mendicity (1824) 673
19. letitia Elizabeth landon: The Factory (1835) 675
2O» Caroline Norton: A Voice from the Factories (stanzas 34-48)
1836 678
XI. Poets in Relationship 682
1. William blake: and Catherine Blake, I Love the Jocund Dance
(Poetical Sketches 1783) 684
XV111 CONTENTS
2. ROBERT BURNS:
(i) and Elizabeth Paton, A Poet s Welcome to his Love-begotten
Daughter (May 1785; publ. 1801) 685
(n) and Agnes Craif McLehose, Ae Fond Kiss (Dec. 1787; publ.
1792) 687
(m) and Jean Armour (by now Mrs Burns), / Love My Jean (April
1788; publ. 1790) 687
(rv) and Mary Campbell, Highland Mary (Nov. 1792; publ.
1799) 688
3. charlotte smith: To My Children (1788) 689
4. mary robinson: and General Sir Banastre Tarleton, Written
Between Dover and Calais, July iygs (1793) 690
5. William cowpeR: and Mary Unwin, To Mary (autumn 1793; publ.
1803) 69a
6. gharles lamb: To Mary Ann Lamb (1795; publ. 1797) 694
7. SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE:
(i) Composed on a Journey Homeward, Ike Author Having Received
Intelligence of the Birth of a Son, September so, 1796
(1797) 604
(ii) Letter to Sara Hutchinson: 4 April1802, Sunday Evening (from
MS 1936) 695
8. WILLIAM WORDSWORTH:
(I) and Dorothy Wordsworth
(i) To My Sister (March 1798; publ. Lyrical Ballads 1798) 704
(ii) from Home at Grasmere (March 1800; publ. from MS
1888) 705
(iii) To a Butterfly ( Stay near me ) spring 1802; publ. 1807 707
(iv) The Sparrow s Nest (spring 1802; publ. 1807) 707
(v) Child of My Parents (1805 Prelude XIII210-46) publ. 1850/
from MS 1926 708
(II) and Caroline (Vallon) Wordsworth, It is a Beauteous Evening
(Aug. 1802; publ. 1807) 709
(m) and Mary Wordsworth (nee Hutchinson)
(i) She Was a Phantom ofDeUght (Feb. 1804; publ. 1807) 709
(ii) Another Maid There Was (1805 Prelude VI233-9, XI215-
22) publ. 1850/from MS 1926 710
(iv) and Catharine Wordsworth, Surprised by Joy (c. 1813-14; publ.
1815) 711
9. PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY:
(I) and Harriet Shelley (nee Westbrook), To Harriet (1812) 711
(II) and Mary Shelley (nee Godwin), from Dedication to Loon and
Cythna 1-46, gi-126 (1817) 712
(hi) and Teresa Viviani, Epipsychidion (1821) 714
XJX CONTENTS
(rv) and Jane Williams
(i) To Janetvith aGuitar (June 1822; publ. 1833) 729
(ii) To Jane: The Stars Were Twinkling (June 1823; publ.
1832) 731
10. LORD BYRON:
(I) and Lady Frances Webster, When We Two Parted (Aug.-Sept.
1815; publ. 1816) 733
(II) and Lady Byron, Fare Thee Well (1816) 733
(in) and Augusta Leigh
(i) Stanzas to Augusta ( When all around ) 1816 735
(ii) Stanzas to Augusta ( Though the day of my destiny )
1816 737
(r?) and the Countess GuiccioK, Stanzas to the River Po (April 1819;
publ. 1834) 738
(v) and Loukas Chalandritsanos, I Watched Thee (April 1834; from
MS 1887) 740
11. john keats: and Fanny Brawne
(i) The Day Is Gone (10 Oct. 1819; publ. 1838) 741
(ii) / Cry Tour Mercy (mid Oct. 1819; publ. 1848) 741
(iii) Ode to Fanny (Feb. 1830; publ. 1848) 743
12. john clare: and Mary Joyce
(i) Song ( Mary leave thy lowly cot ) 1819-20; publ. 1831 743
(ii) My Mary (1820) 744
(iii) Ballad ( Mary, fete lent me a moment ) 1819-20; publ.
1831 747
13. Felicia hemans: The Dreaming Child (1830) 748
14. CAROLINE NORTON:
(I) and her brother, Recollections (1830) 749
(II) and her children, The Mother s Heart (1836) 750
15. letitia Elizabeth landon: To My Brother (1835) 753
XII. On Poets and Poetry 754
■ 1. mary scott: on Anna Laetitia Barbauld (nee AiMn), from The
Female Advocate (1774) 756
3. ROBERT BURNS:
(i) Epistle toj. Lapraik, An Old Scotch Bare* (April 1785; publ.
1786) 758
(ii) I Am a Bard (c. autumn 1785; publ. 1799) 760
3. helen maria williams: Sonnet on Reading The Mountain Daisy
by Burns (c. 1787; publ. 1791) 762
4. joanna baillie: An Address to the Muses (lines 49-102) 1790 763
5. WILLIAM BLAKE:
(i) Preface to Europe, A Prophecy (engraved 1794) 764
(ii) I Come In Self-Annihilation {Milton plate 41,2-28) c. 1804,
engraved c. 1808-10 765
(iii) Trembling I Sit (Jerusalem, plate 5,16-20) c. 1804-7;
engraved c. 1818 765
6. samuel taylor Coleridge: Nehemiah Higginbottom Sennets
(Nov. 1797)
(i) Pensive at Eve 766
(ii) Oh I Do Love Thee 766
(iii) And This Reft House 767
7. William Wordsworth: Thoughts on Poetic Imagination,
1798-1806
(i) from the Prologue to Peter Bell (April 1798; publ. 1819) 767
(ii) The Glad Preamble (c. 18 Nov. 1799; publ. Prelude 1850/from
MS 1926) 771
(iii) A Dedicated Spirit (1805 Prelude TV 316-45; publ. 1850/from
MS 1926) 772
(iv) Elegiac Stanzas, Suggested by a Picture of Peek Castle in a Storm
(May-June 1806; publ. 1807) 773
8. anna LAETiTiA barbauld: To Mr Coleridge (1799) 775
9. MARY ROBINSON:
(i) Ode Inscribed to the Infant Son ofS. T. Coleridge, Esq., Born 14
Sept 1800 (lines 67-102) Sept 1800; publ. 1806 776
(ii) To the Poet Coleridge (Oct 1800; publ. 1806) 777
10. William Wordsworth: Portraits of Coleridge 779
(i) from The Castle of Indolence Stanzas (May 1802; publ.
1807) 779
(ii) A Mind Debarred (1805 Prelude VI, 239-329) 1804; publ. 1850/
from MS 1926 780
(iii) A Complaint (c. Dec. 1806; publ. 1807) 783
11. mary tighe: Dreams of Delight, Farewell (Psyche, concluding
stanzas) 1802-3; publ. 1805 783
12. samuel taylor coleridgk: To William Wordsworth (Jan. 1807;
publ. 1817) 784
13. lord byron: English Bards and Scotch Reviewers (lines 1-38, 85-
148) 1809 787
14. james leigh hunt: Feast ofthe Poets (lines 204-41) 1811; expanded
1814 789
15. lord byron: Tis to Create (Childe Harold III, stanzas 3-6) April
1816; publ. 1817 790
16. percy bysshe shelley: To Wordsworth (1816) 792
17. JOHN KEATS: 792
(i) Sleep and Poetry (lines 96-162) 1817 792
(ii) The Fall of Hyperion: A Dream (Canto I, lines 1-27,87-294)
July-Sept 1819; 1856 794
od CONTENTS
18. PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY: 799
(i) Julian andMaddalo:A Conversation (lines 1-67) Oct. 1818; publ.
1824 799
(ii) Adonais: An Elegy on the Death of John Keats (stanzas 1-8,
39-58) 1822 802
19. LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON: Sappho s Song (l8?4) 809
20. samuel taylor coleridge: Work Without Hope (21 Feb. 1825;
publ. 1828) 809
21. thomas hood: Fake Poets and True (1827) 810
22. FELICIA HEMANS:
(i) The Grave of a Poetess (Records of Woman 1838) 810
(ii) Properzia Rossi (Records of Woman 1828) 812
(Hi) To Wordsworth (1828) 815
23. William Wordsworth: Extempore Effusion Upon the Death of
James Hogg (1835) 816
24. LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON:
(i) Felicia Hemans (c. 1835; publ. 1838) 818
(ii) The Poet s Lot (c. 1837; publ. 1841) 820
NOTES 823
SHORT BIOGRAPHIES 978
INDEX OF POETS AND THEIR WORKS 985
INDEX OF TITLES 991
INDEX OF FIRST LINES 997
gjjhe Romanticism<;/thaf emerged after the American and French
revolutions of 1776 and 1789 represented a new flowering of the
imagination and the spirit, and a celebration of the soul of humanity
with its capacity for love. This extraordinary collection :1 sets the
acknowledged genius of poems such as Blake s Tyger , Coleridge s
Kubla Khan and Shelley s Ozymandias alongside verse from less
well-known figures and women poets such as Charlotte Smith and
Hv ary Robinson. We also see familiar poets in an unaccustomed light,
as Blake, Wordsworth and Shelley demonstrate their comic skills, while
Coleridge, Keats and Clare explore the Gothic and surreal
connections between the poets. In .their introduction Jonathan and-
•tJessica Wordsworth explore Romanticism as a way of .responding
to the world, and they beqin each section with a preface, notes and
bibliography. ffi|JffoBKtIipl^plw^
n iibsolytely fascinating selections notable for its women poets, its intrigul
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author_GND | (DE-588)141015721 |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV019784705 |
callnumber-first | P - Language and Literature |
callnumber-label | PR1222 |
callnumber-raw | PR1222 |
callnumber-search | PR1222 |
callnumber-sort | PR 41222 |
callnumber-subject | PR - English Literature |
classification_rvk | HL 1570 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)57691810 (DE-599)BVBBV019784705 |
dewey-full | 821.708 |
dewey-hundreds | 800 - Literature (Belles-lettres) and rhetoric |
dewey-ones | 821 - English poetry |
dewey-raw | 821.708 |
dewey-search | 821.708 |
dewey-sort | 3821.708 |
dewey-tens | 820 - English & Old English literatures |
discipline | Anglistik / Amerikanistik |
era | Geschichte 1800-1900 |
era_facet | Geschichte 1800-1900 |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)4002214-6 Anthologie gnd-content |
genre_facet | Anthologie |
geographic | Großbritannien |
geographic_facet | Großbritannien |
id | DE-604.BV019784705 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T20:06:03Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0140435689 9780140435689 |
language | English |
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physical | XLVIII, 1005 S. |
publishDate | 2005 |
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publishDateSort | 2005 |
publisher | Penguin |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Penguin classics |
spelling | The Penguin book of romantic poetry ed. by Jonathan Wordsworth ... London [u.a.] Penguin 2005 XLVIII, 1005 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Penguin classics Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke Geschichte 1800-1900 English poetry 19th century Romanticism Great Britain Lyrik (DE-588)4036774-5 gnd rswk-swf Romantik (DE-588)4050491-8 gnd rswk-swf Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd rswk-swf Großbritannien (DE-588)4002214-6 Anthologie gnd-content Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 s Romantik (DE-588)4050491-8 s Lyrik (DE-588)4036774-5 s DE-604 Wordsworth, Jonathan 1932-2006 Sonstige (DE-588)141015721 oth Digitalisierung UBPassau application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=013110574&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Passau application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=013110574&sequence=000002&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext |
spellingShingle | The Penguin book of romantic poetry English poetry 19th century Romanticism Great Britain Lyrik (DE-588)4036774-5 gnd Romantik (DE-588)4050491-8 gnd Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4036774-5 (DE-588)4050491-8 (DE-588)4014777-0 (DE-588)4002214-6 |
title | The Penguin book of romantic poetry |
title_auth | The Penguin book of romantic poetry |
title_exact_search | The Penguin book of romantic poetry |
title_full | The Penguin book of romantic poetry ed. by Jonathan Wordsworth ... |
title_fullStr | The Penguin book of romantic poetry ed. by Jonathan Wordsworth ... |
title_full_unstemmed | The Penguin book of romantic poetry ed. by Jonathan Wordsworth ... |
title_short | The Penguin book of romantic poetry |
title_sort | the penguin book of romantic poetry |
topic | English poetry 19th century Romanticism Great Britain Lyrik (DE-588)4036774-5 gnd Romantik (DE-588)4050491-8 gnd Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd |
topic_facet | English poetry 19th century Romanticism Great Britain Lyrik Romantik Englisch Großbritannien Anthologie |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=013110574&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=013110574&sequence=000002&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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