Update

You are looking at 1-8 of 8 entries  for:

  • Type: Overview Page x
clear all

View:

Charles Lamb

Charles Lamb  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Literature
(1775–1834),was born in London. His father, the Lovel of ‘The Old Benchers of the Inner Temple’ in Essays of Elia, was the clerk to Samuel Salt, a lawyer, whose house in Crown Office Row was Lamb's ...
Lady Morgan

Lady Morgan  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Literature
(1783?–1859),novelist: buried in London (Kensington: Brompton cemetery). The Wild Irish Girl 1806.
life-writing

life-writing  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Literature
A modern term meant to cover the general realm of non-fictional writings about the lives, experiences, and memories of individual people or small groups of people. Thus although excluding most other ...
Lord Orford Horace Walpole

Lord Orford Horace Walpole  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Literature
(fourth earl of Orford) (1717–97), fourth son of Sir Robert Walpole, travelled in France and Italy with Gray during 1739–41, and met in Florence Sir Horace Mann, who became one of his most valued ...
prose

prose  

The form of written language that is not organized according to the formal patterns of verse; although it will have some sort of rhythm and some devices of repetition and balance, these are not ...
Robert Southey

Robert Southey  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Literature
(1774–1843).Southey had a strange career, moving from extreme radicalism in the 1790s to a gloomy conservatism by the 1810s. Born in Bristol, he was educated at Westminster and Balliol College, ...
William Hazlitt

William Hazlitt  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Literature
(b Maidstone, Kent, 10 Apr. 1778; d London, 18 Sept. 1830).English critic. He is known mainly for his literary criticism, but he also wrote much on the fine arts and he ranks as the most important ...
William Taylor

William Taylor  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Literature
(1765–1836),author and translator, who did much to popularize German literature through his translations of Bürger's ballads (see Lenore) and works by G. E. Lessing and Goethe. He was a friend and ...

View: