The Collected Letters of Sir George and Lady Beaumont to the Wordsworth Family, 1803–1829

The Collected Letters of Sir George and Lady Beaumont to the Wordsworth Family, 1803–1829

Author: Jessica Fay

Publisher: Liverpool University Press

Published: 2021-04-01

Total Pages: 380

ISBN-13: 1800858655

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Sir George Beaumont is a key figure in the history of British art. As well as being a respected amateur landscape painter, he was a prominent patron, a collector, and co-founder of the National Gallery. William Wordsworth described Beaumont’s friendship as one of the chief blessings of his life, and this edition reveals that the two men became collaborators as well as companions. In addition to documenting unique perspectives on social, political, and cultural events of the early nineteenth century (providing new contexts for reading Wordsworth’s mature poetry), the letters collected here chart the progress of an increasingly intimate inter-familial relationship. The picture that emerges is of a coterie that – in influence, creativity, and affection – rivals Wordsworth’s more famous exchange with Coleridge at Nether Stowey in the 1790s. The edition includes an extended study of how Wordsworth and Beaumont helped shape one another’s work, tracing processes of mutual artistic development that involved not only a meeting of aristocratic refinement and rural simplicity, of a socialite and a lover of retirement, of a painter and a poet, but also an aesthetic rapprochement between neoclassical and romantic values, between the impulse to idealize and the desire to particularize.


Reviewing Before the Edinburgh, 1788-1802

Reviewing Before the Edinburgh, 1788-1802

Author: Derek Roper

Publisher: University of Delaware Press

Published: 1978

Total Pages: 336

ISBN-13: 9780874131284

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This book, a study of English literary reviewing during the fifteen years before the founding in 1802 of the Edinburgh Review analyzes the achievement of reviewers of works by Burns, Landor, Moore, Scott, Southey, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Burke, Paine, Malthus, and many others.


Romantic Indians

Romantic Indians

Author: Tim Fulford

Publisher: OUP Oxford

Published: 2006-01-26

Total Pages: 332

ISBN-13: 0191534234

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Romantic Indians considers the views that Britons, colonists, and North American Indians took of each other during a period in which these people were in a closer and more fateful relationship than ever before or since. It is, therefore, also a book about exploration, empire, and the forms of representation that exploration and empire gave rise to-in particular the form we have come to call Romanticism, in which 'Indians' appear everywhere. It is not too much to say that Romanticism would not have taken the form it did without the complex and ambiguous image of Indians that so intrigued both the writers and their readers. Most of the poets of the Romantic canon wrote about them-not least Southey, Wordsworth, and Coleridge; so did many whom we have only recently brought back to attention-including Bowles, Hemans, and Barbauld. Yet Indians' formative role in the aesthetics and politics of Romanticism has rarely been considered. Tim Fulford aims to bring that formative role to our attention, to show that the images of native peoples that Romantic writers received from colonial administrators, politicians, explorers, and soldiers helped shape not only these writers' idealizations of 'savages' and tribal life, but also their depictions of nature, religion, and rural society. The romanticization of Indians soon affected the way that real native peoples were treated and described by generations of travellers who had already, before reaching the Canadian forest or the mid-western plains, encountered the literary Indians produced back in Britain. Moreover, in some cases Native Americans, writing in English, turned the romanticization of Indians to their own ends. This book highlights their achievement in doing so-featuring fascinating discussions of several little-known but brilliant Native American writers.