tJ J .*... STUDENTS' HANDBOOK OF THE FACTS OF ENGLISH LITERATURE Tflniform CENTURY READINGS FOR A COURSE IN ENGLISH LITERATURE BV J. W. CUNLIFFE, D.LiT. J. F. A. PYRE, PH.D. AND KARL YOUNG, PH.D. OF THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN 1 100 PAGES. PRICE, $2.50 STUDENTS' HANDBOOK OF THE FACTS OF ENGLISH LITERATURE ARRANGED IN CLASSIFIED OUTLINES COMPILED BY J. F. A. PYRE, PH.D. THOMAS H. DICKINSON PH.D. KARL YOUNG PH.D. OF THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN NEW YORK THE CENTURY CO. 1912 Copyright, 1910, by THE CENTURY Co Published, September, NOTE. These Outlines are designed to reinforce a series of lectures and to present in convenient form the substantial facts of the history of English literature. They may be used in connection with the Century Readings for a Course in English Literature issued by the same publishers. After Outline XII, unless otherwise stated, all dates appended to the titles of literary works indicate earliest printed publication. 268134 OUTLINES OUTLINE I /:/; The Formation of the English People RETAIN AT THE TlME OF C&SARS INVASION, 55 B. C. 1. Three 'Branches of the Celtic Race. a. Britons, or Brythons, in the Southeast. b. Gaels, or Goidels, in West and North. c. Caledonians (and Picts?), in extreme North. 2. Celtic Contributions to English Literature. a. To the language, only a score or two of words. b. To English literature, many romantic stories. (See Outlines VI and VII.) ROMAN OCCUPATION. 1. Roman Invasions. a. 55 and 54 B. C., two invasions by Caesar. b. 43 A. D., invasion under Emperor Claudius. Under a series of gov- ernors conquest completed by 82 A. D. c. 410, Roman rule withdrawn. 2. Roman Occupation (43-410) and English Literature. a. Language. A small number of Latin words entered the language as the result of the Roman occupation. The important influx of Latin words into English occurred later. b. Literature. Contributed practically nothing to the content of Eng- lish literature. 3. Withdrawal of Romans Left Celts as Before. III. ANGLO-SAXON CONQUEST. 1. Invasions. a. Jutes (Denmark) invade Southeast, 449 A. D. (?). b. Saxons (Mouth of Weser) invade Southwest, c. 477. c. Angles (Schleswig) invade East and North, 5th century. 2. Permanent Occupation of Invaders. Celts exterminated or driven to West and North. 3. Anglo-Saxon Conquest and English Literature. (See Outlines II, III, and IV.) IV. THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE. i. The Name. Celts in Britain called both invaders and their language, Saxon. Writ- ers soon began to call both language and people, English, possibly be- cause Angles outnumbered Jutes and Saxons. Periods of the English Language. a. Anglo-Saxon, or Old English, 500-1150. (Alfred.) b. Middle English, 1150-1500. (Chaucer.) c. Modern English, I500-Present. (Shakspere, Milton, Words- worth.) OUTLINE III Anglo-Saxon Christian Poetry I. INTRODUCTION OF CHRISTIANITY. 1. Roman Christianity. King ^thelberht of Kent converted after the arrival of Augustine, who reached England in 597 (See Bede, Ecclesiastical History, Bk. I, Chap. 25). King Edwin of Northumbria converted by Paulinus, a dis- ciple of Augustine, about 627. (See Bede, Bk. II, Chap. 13.) 2. Irish Christianity. In course of 7th century conversion of Northumbria, Wessex, Mercia, and Essex secured by Irish missionaries. 3. Council of Whitby, 664. Differences between Roman and Irish Christianity settled in favor of Rome. (See Bede, Bk. Ill, Chap. 25.) II. THE CEDMONIAN POEMS. Bede (Bk. IV, Chap. 24) recounts the inspiration and poetical activity of Caedmon (fl. 670). Junius (Librarian of the Earl of Arundel) published (1655) a MS. con- taining four poetical paraphrases long ascribed to Caedmon. 1. Genesis. Paraphrase of Genesis to story of Abraham and Isaac. Combination of two poems, Genesis A (lines 1-234, 852-2735) and Genesis B (lines 235-851). A and B differ in style. 2. Exodus. Free paraphrase, chiefly of story of Passage of Red Sea by Israelites. Style more highly colored and original than that of Genesis. 3. Daniel. Free paraphrase of Book of Daniel, Chaps. I-IV. 4. Christ and Satan. Consists of three poems : Fall of the Angels, Har- rowing of Hell, Temptation of Christ by Satan. The only poem that can with any confidence be assigned to Caedmon is the so-called Hymn of Ccedmon. III. CYNEWULF. An English ecclesiastic, perhaps a bishop, of the 8th cen- tury. 1. Christ, Advent, Ascension, Last Judgment. 2. Elene, Legend of Helen, mother of Constantine. 2. Juliana, Legend of Saint Juliana. 4. Fates of the Apostles. IV. SCHOOL OF CYNEWULF. 1. Phoenix. 2. Judith. 3. Andreas. V. RELIGIOUS LYRICS. 1. Dream of the Rood. 2. Bede's Death Song. OUTLINE IV Alfred the Great and Anglo-Saxon Learning I. MONASTIC LEARNING (LATIN). 1. Aldhelm (d. 709). First great scholar in England. 2. Bede (d. 735). Greatest scholar of the Anglo-Saxon period. Lived at the monastery of Jarrow, in Northumbria. Ecclesiastical History of the English People (731), treats history of Britain from 55 B.C. to 731 A.D. 3. Alcuin (735-804). Educated at York. Especially distinguished for his educational services under Charlemagne. II. Alfred the Great (849-901; King of Wessex, 871-901). 1. Life. In his youth, visited Rome, and the Frankish court of Charles the Bald. From travel and from personal relations with the Continent, Al- fred gained a cosmopolitan point of view reflected later in his adminis- tration of the kingdom of Wessex. Resisted inroads of the Danes, and by Treaty of Wedmore (878) forced 'Danes to retire north of Watling Street. Took a personal part in the administration of justice. Patron- ized learning; increased the number of monastery schools; secured the aid of foreign scholars, of whom the most important is Asser, a Welsh cleric, who wrote a Life of King Alfred, our most valuable authority concerning Alfred's personality. 2. Literary work. Chiefly translation. a. The Pastoral Care, by Pope Gregory (Pope, 590-604). A guide for those in ecclesiastical authority. Alfred's own Preface indicates his ideals for reviving learning in England. b. History, by Orosius, a -Spanish ecclesiastic of the 5th century. A universal history, widely used. Alfred altered the original freely, both by omission and by addition. Condensed seven books to six. c. Ecclesiastical History, by Bede (see above). d. The CojisnlaiWM^f^hilosoph^^^Q.et'h'ms (d. 524?). A dialogue ^"between Boethiusand Philosopny. ^Central doctrine is fatalism and submission. Alfred translates freely, adding occasional facts, pious observations, and vivid figures of speech. e. Alfred took an active part in maintaining and perfecting the Anglo- Saxon Chronicle, a desultory history of England which was continued from time to time at several monasteries, and which eventually cov- ered the period 60 B. C. to 1154 A. D. 3. Alfred's Contribution to English Literature. a. Revived learning in England. Learning had declined in Northum- bria, where it had first gained distinction. Largely through his per- sonal effort, Alfred established a new center of learning in Wessex. b. Revived the native language. By translating distinguished Latin works into Anglo-Saxon, Alfred gave dignity to the native language, and contributed much toward establishing a clear, idiomatic English prose style. i OUTLINE V The Norman Conquest I. ENGLISH HISTORY FROM ALFRED TO 1066. 1. Danish Rule, 1016-1042. 2. Saxons Restored. Edward the Confessor, 1042-1066. II. ENGLISH LITERATURE FROM ALFRED (d. 901) TO 1066. ^Elfric (955-c. 1025). Sermons, written to a large extent in allitera- tive prose. III. THE NORMANS BEFORE 1066. Rollo, the Northman, settled at mouth of the Seine 902. Northmen of Normandy adopted Christianity and the French language. English king, Ethelred, married (1002) Emma, daughter of Richard, Duke of the Normans. William, sixth Duke of Normandy (after 1035), first cousin of Edward the Confessor. COMING OF THE NORMANS TO ENGLAND. 1. William's Claims Opposed to Those of Earl Harold. 2. Battle of Hastings (Senlac), 1066. 3. Political Effect. Feudalism perfected in England. EFFECT UPON THE ENGLISH LANGAUGE. i. Grammar. Accelerated dropping of inflectional endings. (Cf. ' of,' in place of genitive case ending.) ^ 2 Phraseology. Many phrases modeled on French... (Cf 'to bear' arms, witness, etc., from French porter.) 3. Vocabulary. Considerable French element introduced. VI. EFFECT UPON ENGLISH METRICAL FORM. Resulted in a compromise between Anglo-Saxon (irregular number of syllables, alliteration, accent) and French (rime, regular number of syllables, accent unimportant). Result seen in Chaucer: rime in place of alliteration; accent retained, but reduced to regularity. VII. EFFECT UPON ENGLISH LITERATURE. 1. Lyric Poetry (Provencal). 2. Tales and Fabliaux. Allegory. Lais. (Marie de France, early I3th century.) Romances. (See Outlines VI and VII.) n OUTLINE VI The Rise and Flourishing of Romance I. ROMANCE. 1. A romance is a fictitious story of heroic, marvelous, or supernatural incidents 5 derived either from history or from popular tradition, and written at considerable length, either in verse or in prose, by a con- scious literary artist, for refined and courtly readers. Romance is to be distinguished from epic, fairy tale, ballad, legend. Romances arose in the I2th century, chiefly in France, where stories from the best known parts of Europe and Asia were gathered and given romantic treatment. From France, romances were distributed to other countries, often to the countries from which the original stories had arisen. 2. Romance, the product of feudal society. II. ENGLISH ROMANCES. In England, romances in English and romances in French existed side by side. With one or two possible exceptions, Eng- lish romances are derived from French romances. 1. Ultimate Sources of English Romances. a. French material. Stories of Charlemagne, Roland, and other na- tional French heroes. In France these stories (chansons de geste) were originally national epics. In England the same stories became pure romance. b. Celtic material. 1. Breton lais. Short romantic tales of love, magic, and adventure. Of lais the most distinguished author is Marie de France (fl. early I3th century), a native of France, but a resident of England. 2. Arthurian romances. (See Outline VII.) c. Matter from antiquity. 1. Story of Thebes. 2. Story of Troy. 3. Story of Alexander. 4. Story of ^Eneas. d. English (or Scandinavian) material. Although these are, probably, true Germanic stories, and although they were, probably, current first in Germanic languages, the extant English romance versions have in nearly all cases come through a French intermediary. 1. Horn. 2. Havelock. 3. Guy of Warwick. 4. Bevis of Hampton. 2. Literary Form. a. Verse, couplets, stanzas, alliterative lines. b. Plot often rambling or monotonously long. c. Picturesque language. d. Conventional characterization. T OUTLINE VII - . Arthurian Romance I. THE ULTIMATE SOURCES OF ARTHURIAN ROMANCE. 1. Annals. a. Historia Britonum (c. 800 A. D.), usually ascribed to Nennius. Latin. Arthur merely a valiant leader of Britons. b. Annales Cambrics (loth century). Latin. Arthur mentioned merely as a successful leader of Britons. 2. Celtic Tales. i* The Mabinogion. A I4th century compilation of Welsh tales. Of these tales two are Arthurian stories of pure British origin, Kulhwch and Olwen, and The Dream of Rhonabitiy, in which Arthur is a fairy kind, surrounded by uncouth courtiers who have magic at their commancL II. DEVELOPMENT OF ARTHURIAN ROMANCE. 1. Geoffrey of Monmouth: Historia Britonum (c. 1137). Lptin. Using ' a very ancient book in the British tongue,' Geoffrey developed Arthur into the central figure of the Historia. Brilliant king, world conqueror. No Lancelot, Tristan, Holy Grail, or Round Table. 2. Metrical Chronicles, Based Ultimately upon Geoffrey's Historia. -f. a. Wace: Brut (1155 A. D.). French verse. Added (i) Round Table: (2) details concerning the Passing of Arthur, b. Layamon: Brut (c. 1200). English alliterative verse. Based upon Wace's Brut. Added (i) fairy element; (2) making and properties of the Round Table. III. ARTHURIAN ROMANCES. 1. Cycle of Merlin. A magician closely associated with Arthur. 2. Cycle of Gawain. Arthur's nephew. The most frequent single figure in Arthurian romance. In early romances, Gawain is the gentleman par excellence (see Sir Gawain and the Green Knight}. In later stones (see Malory and Tennyson) he became 'a reckless and irrev- erent knight.' 3. Cycle of Lancelot. Not connected with the original Arthurian tradi- tion. Lancelot first appears as the lover of Queen Guenevere in the Conte de la Charette of Chretien de Troies (fl. c. 1160). 4. Cycle of the Holy Grail. In origin, the grail probably a heathen magic vessel. Original hero of the grail quest was Gawain, later superseded by Perceval, and by Lancelot's son, Galahad. 5. Cycle of Tristan. Story of Tristan and Iseult not originally connected with Arthurian tradition. 6. Cycle of the Death of Arthur. (See Outline XII.) IV. Chretien de Troies. French courtly poet (fl. c. 1160). Wrote (in whole or in part) six Arthurian poems; Erec and Enide, Cliges, Conte de la Charette, Ywain, Tristan, Perceval. OUTLINE VIII Early Middle English Literature I. ANONYMOUS LITERATURE. 1. Romances. (See Outlines VI and VII.) 2. Lais. (See Outline VI.) 3. Religious and Didactic Works. a. Proverb poems. Proverbs of Hendyng (c. 1300). b. Debates. Debate of Body and Soul (c. 1200). c. Sermons. d. Legends of saints. Golden Legend (i3th century). 4. Tales. a. Oriental tales. Dame Sirith (i3th cent.). See Chaucer's Mer- chant's Tale and Manciple's Tale. b. Fabliaux. Popular, pointed, bourgeois anecdotes. See Chaucer's Miller's Tale, Reeve's Tale, Friar's Tale, and Sumnour's Tale. c. Pious Tales. Exempla, tales inculcating a moral or religious prin- ciple ; miracula, miracles of saints. See Chaucer's Prioress's Tale. d. Beast-fables. See Chaucer's Nun's Priest's Tale. 5. Lyrics. a. Religious. A Good Orison of Our Lady (c. 1210). b. Popular. Alysoun (c. 1300). 6. Allegory. Roman de la Rose (i3th century). See Chaucer (Outline IX). II. AUTHORS PRECEDING CHAUCER. 1. Layamon: Brut (c. 1200). (See Outline VII.) 2. Orm (fl. c. 1200) : Ormulum, an unfinished series of paraphrases of the Gospels of the ecclesiastical year, with homilies. III. CHAUCER. (See Outlines IX and X.) IV. CONTEMPORARIES OF CHAUCER. 1. Piers the Plowman. Long ascribed to William Langland. An allegorical poem composed and revised at different times during the period 1362-1398, probably by .some five different writers. The larger part of the original poem probably by a single author, whose Christian name was Will, and whose surname may have been Langland or Lang- ley. The poem consists of three visions : Vision of the Field Full of Folk, Vision of Piers the Plowman, and Vision of Do-well, Do-bet, and Do-best. Written in alliterative verse. 2. John Gower (c. 1325-1408). Friend of Chaucer. Confessio Amantis (1386-90). A series of more than a hundred stories arranged in a ' frame,' to illustrate the seven deadly sins. Simple, di- rect narration. Regular, polished riming verse. Gower's Tale of Florent, Tale of Appius and Virginia, and Tale of Constance embody stories found in Chaucer's Wife of Bath's Tale, Physician's Tale, and Man of Law's Tale respectively. 3. John Wyclif. (See Outline XXX.) OUTLINE IX Chaucer: Life and Works I. LIFE OF GEOFFREY CHAUCER (c. 1340-1400). Born in London about 1340. Son of a vintner. 1357, attachedTO House- hold of Edward Ill's son, Lionel. 1359, served in English army in France, and taken prisoner. 1367, granted life pension for services as valet in King's household. 1372-73, first diplomatic mission to Italy. 1374, held office connected with customs of port of London. 1377, diplo- matic missions in Flanders and France. 1378, second journey to Italy in King's service. 1382, held another office connected with customs. 1385, member of Parliament for Kent. 1389, Clerk of King's works at Westminster. 1390, Clerk of King's Works at Windsor. 1394, granted an additional pension of 20 pounds a year. 1399, on accession of Henry IV, Chaucer's pension again increased. 1400, Chaucer's death. II. CHIEF POETICAL W T ORKS OF CHAUCER. 1. French Period (to 1373). a. Romance of the Rose, a translation of part of Le Roman de la Rose, a French allegorical poem written in the course of the I3th century. Probably Chaucer wrote only the first part of the English translation. b. Book of the Duchess (1369-70). Written as a memorial to Lady Blanche (died Sept., 1369), wife of John of Gaunt (Chaucer's patron). Shows influence of French alle- gorical love poetry. 2. Italian Period (1373-1385). a. Troilus and Criseyde (c. 1383). Based upon Boccaccio's poem, Filostrato, from which a considerable part is translated literally. b. Parliament of Fowls (c. 1382). Probably celebrates events of the courtship of Richard II and Anne of Bohemia (daughter of Emperor Charles IV), who were married, Jan., 1382. Shows both French and Italian influence. c. House of Fame (c. 1379). Shows influence of French love allegory, of Dante, and of Virgil. 3. English Period (1385-1400). a. Legend of Good Women (c. 1385, and at various times). Series of nine 'legends' (Cleopatra, Thisbe, Dido, Hypsipyle and Medea, Lucretia, Ariadne, Philomela, Phyllis, Hypermnestra), in- troduced by a Prologue based upon French love allegory. b. The Canterbury Tales. (See Outline X.) III. PROSE WORKS OF CHAUCER. i. Translation of Boethius' Consolation of Philosophy (c. 1380). (See Outline IV.) * 2. A Treatise on the Astrolabe (1391). 3. Chaucer's Tale of Melibeus. (See Outline X.) 4. Parson's Tale. (See Outline X.) OUTLINE X Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales I. PLAN OF THE CANTERBURY TALES. 1. Literary Parallels. a. Boccaccio: Decameron. b. John Gower: Confessio Amantis. (See Outline VIII.) c. Giovanni Sercambi of Lucca: N&yelle (c. 1375). d. Proces of the Seven Sages. 2. 120 Tales Proposed. 24 written (not all finished). I. SUGGESTED TABULATION OF THE CANTERBURY TALES. i .First Day, April 17, London to Dartford. ^TCnight. (Based upon Boccaccio's Teseide.) Miller. (A fabliau.) Reeve. (A fabliau.) Cook. (Unfinished.) 2. Second Day, April 18, Dartford to Rochester. Man of Law. (Based upon Trivet's Anglo-Norman Chronicle.) Shipman. (A fabliau.) "'Prioress. (A legend.) CHaucer, two tales: Sir Thopas (in verse), and Tale of Melibeus (in prose). Monk. (Short stories of misfortunes of famous persons.) Nun's Priest. (A beast fable.) 3. Third Day, April 19, Rochester to Ospringe. Physician. (Tale of Appius and Virginia.) u-~ Pardoner. (A fabliau.) Wife of Bath. (A fairy tale. Arthurian background.) Friar. - (A fabliau.) - Somnour.' (A popular anecdote.) Clerk. (From Petrarch's Latin rendering of a novella of Boccaccio.) Merchant. (Tale of January and May.) 4. Fourth Day, April 20, Ospringe to Canterbury. Squire. (An unfinished romance.) -- Franklin (A laif) Second Nun. ('The legend of St. Cecilia.) Canon's Yeoman. (A tale exposing alchemistic impostures.) Manciple. (Based on Ovid's fable of Apollo and Coronis.) Parson. (A prose sermon on the seven deadly sins.) 21 OUTLINE XI Later Middle English Literature I. IMITATORS OF CHAUCER. 1. English. a. John Lydgate (c. 1370-0. 1450). /y -^t> i. Troy Book. Translation into English verse of Guido delle G lonne's Latin Historia Troiana (1287). Incidental praise < Chaucer. f- 2. Fall of Princes. Adapted into English verse from Boccaccio De Casibus Virorum lllustrium. See Chaucer's Monk's Tale. * 3. Temple of Glass. See Chaucer's House of Fame. 4. Lives of Saints. 5. Story of Thebes. A continuation of Chaucer's Canterbury Tale b.jrhomas Occleve (c. 1368-0. 1450). i. La Male Regie (c. 1406). A poem of penitence. X2. Regiment of Princes (1412). Advice to Prince of Wales (afte ward Henry V). Contains praise of Chaucer. 2. Scottish. v a. King James I (1394-1437).- The Kingis Quair (' The King's Book/ c. 1423). In the 7-line stanz, riming ababbcc, used by Chaucer in Troilus and elsewhere. Chat cerian phrases. * b. Robert Henryson (c. 1425-0. 1500). 1. Fables. , 7-line stanza, ^W" 2. Testament of Cresseid. Sequel to Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyd > c. William Dunbar (c. 1460-0. 1530). 1. Golden Targe. Contains praise of Chaucer. 2. Lament for the Makers. Places Chaucer first on the roll of En^ lish poets. 3. The Thistle and the Rose. Theme is marriage of James IV an Margaret Tudor (1503). 7-line stanza. II. THE END OF THE MIDDLE AC;ES. i. Sir Thomas Malory. (See Outline XII.) y 2. William Caxton (c. 1422-1491). Translator and printer. After having engaged in trade, in translating, and in printing on Cor tinent, set up his press (1476) in Westminster, near Westminster At bey; here he printed some 71 works. His translation of the Recueil dt Histoires de Troye of Raoul Lefevre, the first book printed in Englisl appeared about 1475, at Bruges. The first dated book printed i England is Dictes and Seyings of the Philosophers (1477). - 3. John Skelton (c. 1460-1529). Tutor of Henry VIII. a. The Book of Philip Sparrow. Lament for a pet sparrow. ' Ske Ionian metre ' consists of short lines, usually of three accented sylk bles, which rime in couplets, triplets, or quartets. b. Bowge of Court. 7-line stanza. c. Garland of Laurel. Allegory. Fundamental motives found in Chat cer's House of Fame and Prologue to Legend of Good Women. 4. Stephen Hawes (c. 1475-0. 1523). a. Pastime of Pleasure. Allegorical, didactic poem. Although it i written largely in 7-line stanza and contains praise of Chaucer, it i not conspicuously influenced by Chaucer. b. Example of Virtue. Allegorical, didactic poem. 23 OUTLINE XII Malory's Morte d' Arthur 1. SIR THOMAS MALORY (c. 1400-1471). Malory was * a gentleman of an ancient house, and a soldier.' A knight, of Newbold Revell, Warwickshire. Served in French wars with Richard Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, who was famous as representing the knightly ideal of the age. Member of parliament for Warwickshire in 1445. Conspicuous on the Lancastrian side in the Wars of the Roses. II. MORTE D'ARTHUR. Published in 1485 by Caxton, who is probably re- sponsible for the somewhat arbitrary divisions into books and chapters, and, perhaps, for certain marks of style. 1. General Contents. Books I-V, Merlin. Books VI-VII, XI-XXI, Lancelot. Books VIII-X, Tristram. 2. Nature of the compilation. A compendium translated and adapted, in great part, directly from French romances. The volume of the sources was about ten times that of Morte d' Arthur itself. The vol- ume, contradictions, and inconsistencies of the sources led to conspic- uous incongruities in the compendious translation. Certain of the best stories, such as Gawain and the Green Knight, are omitted. Orig- inality shown in emphasis upon Arthur as central figure. 3. Literary characteristics. a. Looseness of plot. b. Grammatical looseness. c. Rapidity of narration. d. Vividness of description. e. Graceful and musical style. f. Vocabulary essentially English. "I. ARTHUR IN LATER ENGLISH LITERATURE. 1. EdnumcL _Spenser (1552-1599. See Outline XIX). The Faery Queen (1590-1596). Prefatory letter, to Sir Walter Ral- eigh, declares that the basis of the poem is ' The historye of King Arthure/ Arthur's adventures are unlike those recorded in earlier romances. Arthur appears infrequently, and only as a prince. The first quest (Book I) most nearly resembles earlier Arthurian stories. 2. Thomas Hughes." Misfortunes of Arthur (acted before Queen Eliza- beth, 1588), earliest Arthurian play in English. 3. John Milton ~( 1608-1674. See Outline XXXIII), in two Latin works speaks of his intention (never fulfilled) of writing an Arthurian epic. 4. John Dryden (1631-1700). .King Arthur (acted 1691). 5. Percy: Reliques of Ancient English Poetry (1765) contains such Ar- tmTfian pieces as Sir Lancelot du Lake, The Marriage of Sir Gawain, and King Arthur's Death. 6. Alfred Tennyson (1809-1892). Idylls of the King (1842-1885). 7. Matthew Arnold (1822-1888). -Tristram and Iseult (1852). 8. William Morris (1834-1896). Published in 1858 a volume containing four Arthurian poems: The Defence of Guenevere, King Arthur's Tomb, Sir Galahad, and The Chapel in Lyoness. 9. Algernon Charles Swinburne (1837-1909). Tristram of Lyonesse (1882) -,-The Tale of Balen (1896). ~ 25 OUTLINE XIII English and Scottish Popular Ballads I. THE BALLAD. A poem originating among the folk, and composed (though seldom writ- ten down ) by them. Contains a narrative and a musical element^ it is ' a song that tells a story.' The story is told impersonally by a narrator who has no role in it, and who adds no reflections upon it. !I. CHARACTERISTICS. 1. Subject Matter. a. Domestic relations: Willie's Lady, Clerk Sounders, Glasgerion, ^arl Crawford, Fair Annie, Katherine J affray. b. Supernatural occurrences: Tarn Lin, Kemp, Owyne, Sweet Wil- liam's Ghost. c. History: The Battle of Otterburn, The Hunting of the Cheviot, Flodden Field. d. Outlawry: Adam Bell, and the ballads concerning Robin Hood. e. Riddles, and humorous incidents : Riddles Wisely Expounded, The Gardener, The Crafty Farmer. 2. Literary Characteristics. a. Refrain. b. Repetition. c. Dialogue. d. Absence of figurative language. 3. Metrical Form. Stanza and rime always present. a. Stanza may be a mere couplet of verses of four accents : Hunger is sharper nor a thorn And shame is louder nor a horn. b. Stanza usually consists of four lines, of which the ist and 3rd lines have four accents and the 2d and 4th three accents, and of which the rime-scheme is usually abcb: Robin stode in Bernesdale, And lenyd him to a tre; And bi hym stode Litell Johnn, A gode yeman was he. "I. NUMBER AND CHRONOLOGY. Of the great number of true ballads in English and Scottish only 306 have been preserved." Of these 306 ballads only eleven are extant in MSS. older than the I7th century. Although our sources are somewhat modern, the ballads themselves are in many cases very ancient. OUTLINE XIV The Revival of Learning I. HUMANISM. In literary history this term is applied definitely Jo that part of the Renaissance movement manifested in the revived study of classical antiquity, that is, to the Revival of Learning. The humanists, however, did not confine their activities to pure learning. Humanism began in Italy. II. ITALIAN HUMANISTS. 1. Francesco Petrarch (1304-1374). Although most famous for his ver- nacular poems, wrote in classical Latin numerous works, such as : in prose, De Contemptu Mundi, De Vita Solitaria, Epistolae; in verse, an epic, Africa. 2. Giovanni Boccaccio (1313-1375). Best known for his Decameron and other works in the vernacular. Cultivated Latin classics, and wrote Genealogia Deorum, De Casibus Virorum lllustrium, De Mon- tibus. 3. Fifteenth Century Group. a. Poggio Bracciolini (1380-1459). b. Enea Silvio (1405-64; Pope Pius II, 1458-64). c. Lorenzo de' Medici (1449-1492). III. ENGLISH HUMANISTS. i. ! Earlier English Humanists. a. Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester (1391-1447). Youngest son of Henry IV. Studied at Balliol College, Oxford. Collected books, patronized learning; summoned classical scholars from Italy, b. John Tiptoft (d. 1470). Earl of Worcester. 2. Oxford Group of Humanists. a. William Grocyn (1446-1519). Taught Greek at Oxford. b. Thomas Linacre (1460-1524). Taught Greek at Oxford. c. John Colet 1466-1519). Dean of St. Paul's, London. Lectured at Oxford on the Greek New Testament. d. Desiderius Erasmus (1465-1536). Dutch humanist. Visited Eng- land 1498-99, 1510-14. Best known for his Adagio and Encomium Moriae. IV. SIR THOMAS MORE. 1. Life. Born, 1478. Studied Greek and Latin under Linacre and Grocyn at Oxford. Practiced law. In Parliament 1503-04. 1515, ambassador to Flanders. 1516, Utopia published. Held various public offices. 1521, knighted. 1523, Speaker of House of Commons. 1529, succeeded Wolsey as Chancellor. 1532, opposed projected divorce of Henry VIII and Catherine. Refused to take oath under the Act of Supremacy and was committed to the Tower. Executed July 6, 1535. 2. English Works. *^* a. History of Richard III. b. Miscellaneous Works, >/ 3. Works in Latin. a. Utopia, published in Latin, 1516. Translated into English by Ralph Robinson, 1551. Bk. I, direct criticism of English and European politics. Bk. II, the Utopian ideal. b. Numerous controversial works. 29 OUTLINE XV The Beginnings of the Renaissance I. CLASSICAL TRANSLATIONS. 1. Virgil's /Encid, by Thomas Phaer (1558-1562). 2. Ovid's Metamorphoses, by Arthur Golding (1565-75). 3. Seneca's Tragedies, by Jasper Hey wood and others (1581). 4. Plutarch's Lives, by Sir Thomas North (1579). II. INFLUEME OF ITALY. 1. On Manners. The English traveler. The ideal of the courtier. 2. On Literature. Through Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio, Ariosto. ^3. The Sonnet. 'The most ingenious device for musical expression of a single worthy thought/ (Morley.) Fourteen iambic pentameter lines. a. Petrarch's Italian sonnet. Two stanzas, one of eight lines, called the octave; one of six lines, called the sestet. Riming system: abbaabba cdecde. This form is now most common. b. Surrey's English sonnet. Used by Shakspere. Three quatrains and a couplet. System: abab cdcd efef gg. III. ENGLISH RENAISSANCE POETS. 1. Sir Thomas W^att (i5O3?-i542). Courtier, ambassador. Introduced \ Italian sonnet into England. Author of Certain Psalms . . . drawn into English meter (pub. 1549) and many poems in Tottel's Miscellany (1557). 2. Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey (1517-1547). Courtier and soldier. Inventor of the English form of sonnet. Translated two books of fiLneid. Forty poems in Tottel's Miscellany. 3. Thomas Sackville (1536-1608), created Lord Buckhurst, 1567, Earl of Dorset, 1604. a. Induction to A Mirror for Magistrates (1563). b. (With Thomas Norton) Gorboduc, Senecan tragedy in blank verse (acted ijjjy.). 4. George Gascoigne (i5 2 5?- I 577)" a. The Supposes (acted 1566). Prose comedy. Translation of Ari- osto's 1 Suppositi. b. Jocasta (acted 1566). Tragedy. From Euripides, through Latin and Italian. c. Notes of Instruction (1575). d. The Posies of George Gascoigne (1575). e. The Steel Glass (1576). 5. Tottel's Miscellany, or Songs and Sonnets. Published June, 1557, by Richard Tottel. The first printed collection of lyrics in English. Went through six editions. First edition contained 40 poems by Wyatt, 96 by Surrey, 40 by Grimald, 95 by ' Uncertain authors.' OUTLINE XVI Sir Philip Sidney I. LIFE. Born 1554. Educated at Oxford without taking his degree. Trav- eling on the continent from 1572-75, he came under the intellectual influ- ence of Hubert Languet, was in Paris during the massacre of St. Bar- tholomew's eve, and at Venice became acquainted with Tintoretto and Paolo Veronese. At Vienna studied horsemanship with John Peter Pugliano. Served in diplomatic posts, and studied politics; in 1577 and again in 1584 was entrusted with missions on the continent. From early life found increasing influence at court and among learned men. In 1583 Sidney was knighted, and in the same year married Frances Walsingham. In 1585 he became governor of Flushing, later was colonel in the protestant war in the low countries, was mortally wounded at Zut- phen, and died October 17, 1586. Among 200 elegies, Spenser's Astro- phel: A Pastoral Elegy, is the best. II. SIDNEY AS A POET. i. Astro phel and Stella, a collection of 108 sonnets and II songs. Pub- lished 1591 by Thomas Newman. Begun about 1580. Addressed to Penelope Devereux, daughter of the first earl of Essex ; modeled after sonnets of the Earl of Surrey to Geraldine; they struck a deeper note after her marriage to Lord Rich in 1581 and probably continued until a little after Sidney's marriage to Frances Walsingham. III. SIDNEY AS A WRITER OF PROSE. 1. Arcadia (1580-85; published, 1590). Highly intricate compound of chivalric romance and pastoral poetry. Name derived from the Arca- dia of Jacopo Sannazaro. In content Sidney was influenced by the Spanish tales of chivalry of Amadis and Palmerin. The style is arti- ficial, elaborate, and melodious. 2. An Apology for Poetry (1595). Written about 1580 as A Defense of Poesie, in retort to Gosson's School of Abuse and Apology for the School of Abuse (both 1579), in defense of poetry as a work of the imagination. It is in three parts: ., a. Poetry as teaching virtuous action. ^ b. An enumeration of the forms of poetry. * c. Ari estimate of English poetry of the past and present * OUTLINE XVII The Elizabethan Lyric I. LYRIC MISCELLANIES. Early collections of popular lyrics, religious lyrics, spring-songs, love plaints, and dramatic lyrics. ^^ i. Tottel's Miscellany (1557). (See Outline XV.) / 2. Paradise of Dainty Devices (1576), largely moral lyrics. 3. A Gorgeous Gallery of Gallant Inventions (1578). 4. A Handful of Pleasant Delights (1584). 5. The Phoenix' Nest (1593). 6. England's Helicon (1600), containing lyrics of Sidney, Spenser, Lodge Peele, Barnneld. 7. Davison's Poetical Rhapsody (1602). II. COLLECTIONS OF LYRICS OF INDIVIDUAL POETS. 1. Barnaby Googe : Eglogs, Epytaphes and Soncttes (1563). 2. Gascoigne: A Hundred Sundry Flowers (1572). Reprinted as Tht Posies of George Gascoigne (1575). 3. Spenser (1553-1599)- 1 a. Shepherd's Calendar (1579). b. Complaints (1591). c. Daphnaida (1591). d. Epithalamion (1595). 4. Michael Dray ton (1563-1631). a. Harmony of the Church (1591). b. Shepherd's Garland (1593). c. Idea (1594). d. Poems Lyric and Pastoral (1605). 5. The Passionate Pilgrim (1599). A collection ascribed to Shakspere in which are found five of Shakspere's sonnets, and Marlowe's ' Come live with me.' III. THE SONNET SERIES. First practised by Watson in his pedantic Hekatompathia (1582), th< sonnet series gained great popularity and influence. 1. Sidney: Astro phel and Stella (1591). 2. Samuel Daniel: Delia (1592). 3. Constable: Diana (1592). 4. Barnes: Parthenophil and Parthenope (1593). '' 5. Spenser: Amoretti (1595). f 6. Shakspere: Sonnets (probably composed before 1594). IV. LYRICS IN DRAMA AND ROMANCE. Some of the best lyrics of the Elizabethan Age are found scattered through the works of dramatists and romancers. f- i. Lyly: Alexander and Campaspe (1584), ' Cupid and my Campaspe played.' 2. Peele: Arraignment of Paris (1584), ' Fair and fair, and twice so fair.' 3. Greene: Menaphon (1589), 'Weep not, my wanton, smile upon m> knee.' 4. Lodge: Rosalynde (1590), ' Love in my bosom like a bee.' 5. Sidney: Arcadia (1590), 'My true love hath my heart/ 6. Others in the works of Dekker, Kyd, Nash, and Shakspere. OUTLINE XVIII Elizabethan Prose I. PROSE BEFORE ELIZABETH'S ACCESSION. i. Roger Ascham (1515-1568). Educated at St. John's College, Cain- bridge. Tutor to Princess Elizabeth. Latin Secretary to Queen Mary. Traveled in Germany. A student and teacher of the classics. His works : a. Toxophilus (1544). A defense of archery written in the refined manner of Platonic dialogue. b. The Schoolmaster (1570). Discusses problems of education, travel and things in general. II. NOVELISTS. 1. John Lyly (i554?-i6o6). Educated at Magdalen College, Oxford. Assistant to Master of the Revels and petitioner for the Mastership. Attached to household of Lord Burleigh. Courtier, dramatist (See Outline XXII), novelist. Novels. a. Euphues, The Anatomy of Wit (1578). b. Euphues and his England (1580). Euphuism. A form of composition characterized by alliteration, an- tithesis, word play, reference* and similes drawn from natural history real and imaginary, and classical allusions. Supposed to be imitated from Guevara, of Spain, but largely the outgrowth of the affectation of the age. 2. Sir Philip Sidney (See Outline XVI). 3. Thomas Lodge (i558?-i625). Poet, dramatist, novelist, traveler. Rosalynde: Euphues Golden Legacy (1590). Written in the vein of Euphuism. Followed closely by Shakspere in As You Like 7f. y U/VA^j j OUTLINE XIX Edmund Spenser: Life and Works I. LIFE. Edmund Spenser, elder son of John Spenser, gentleman and cloth-maker, was born in East Smithfield, London, in 1552. He was educated at Merchant Taylors' School and Pembroke Hall, Cambridge (M.A. 1576). Through friendship with Gabriel Harvey, Spenser in 1578 became a mem- ber of Leicester's *household and became a friend of Sir Philip Sidney. In 1580 he was appointed Secretary to Arthur Grey, then recently made lord deputy of Ireland. With the exception of occasional visits he re- mained in Ireland until a month before his death. In 1588 Spenser re- moved to Kilcolman Castle near Cork. Twice he revisited London, first in 1589 to turn over to the printer the first three books of The Faery 8ueen and again in 1596, when the next three books were completed, n the first visit he remained two years and received distinguished atten- tion from Queen Elizabeth. Spenser married Elizabeth Boyle in 1594. In October, 1598, Spenser's castle was burned in an uprising of the natives and with his family he was forced to flee to Cork. He went to London in December, 1598, and died there in poverty, January 16, 1599. II. SPENSER AS A POET. Spenser is known as the ' poets' poet/ His poetry is characterized by unusual sensuous and spiritual beauty. He was also an imitator and experimenter. As a student he contributed fourteen sonnet Visions from Du Bellay to*The Theatre for Worldlings (1568). While in Leicester's household he experimented in classical measures. The Shepherd's Calen- dar and The Faery Queen show Spenser as an innovator in vocabulary. For the latter poem he invented the so-called Spenserian stanza. 111. SPENSER'S POEMS. SU. The Shepherd's Calendar (1579). In twelve pastoral eclogues glo- rifying England and Elizabeth. In reality a poetical miscellany of fables, satires and love verses, distinguished from one another in met- rical form and content. 2. Complaints (1591). A collection of minor verse published on account of the success of The Faery Queen. '3. Astrophel (1595). An elegy on Sidney. 4. Colin Clout's Come Home Again (1595), penned upon his return to Ireland in 1591. 5. Amoretti and Epithalamion (1595). The first was written before his marriage; the second celebrates his marriage to Elizabeth Boyle. ' /: 6. The Faery Queen. First three books, 1590; 2nd three books, 1596. (See Outline XX.) 7. Prothalamion (1596). OUTLINE XX Spenser: The Faery Queen I. INFLUENCES ON SPENSER IN WRITING THE FAERY QUEEN. 1. The Romances of Chivalry. a. Malory's Morte D f Arthur. b. Amadis of Gaul. c. Ariosto's Orlando Furioso. d. Tasso's Jerusalem Delivered. 2. Didactic Allegories. a. Roman de la Rose. b. Dante's The Divine Comedy. c. The Visions of Langland. d. Hampole's Prick of Conscience. e. Robert of Brunne's Handling Sin. f. Chaucer's Parliament of Birds, etc. g. Sackville's Induction to A Mirror for Magistrates. 3. Classical Influence of the Philosophies of Plato and Aristotle. II. THE PLAN OF THE FAERY QUEEN. 1. The Large Structure. In Spenser's prefatory letter he indicates that The Faery Queen is to be in 12 books, that Arthur is to be the central figure, and that each book is to represent one of the 12 private moral virtues as devised by Aristotle. Only six of the 12 books were com- pleted. Book i, Red Cross Knight: Holiness. Book 2, Sir Guyon: Temperance. Book 3, Britomarte : Chastity. Book 4, Cambel and Triamond : Friendship. Book 5, Sir Artegall: Justice. Book 6, Calidore: Courtesy. 2. The Allegory. Spenser's allegory is involved and inconsistent. There are three types: a. Moral allegory, representing the struggles of the Virtues and Vices, thinly veiled 'under the names_of the characters. b. Political allegory. Directed primarily to the glory of Queen Eliza- beth. In this" allegory Arthur stands for Leicester, Sir Satyrane for Sir John Perrot, Queen Mary for Duessa. Events alluded to are the St. Bartholomew's Eve massacre, the Armada, the troubles in Ireland. c. Religious allegory. Treating the contests among the English Re- formed Church, The Church of England, the Roman Church, Pagan- ism and Atheism. III. THE SPENSERIAN STANZA. Perhaps a modification of the linked quatrain stanza, used in The Shep- herd's Calendar by the addition of a running Alexandrine (a line of twelve syllables) after the second quatrain, (a b a b b c b c c.) IV. SPENSERIAN LANGUAGE. Spenser affected the archaic in language, pronunciation and grammar. Examples: afoore, thenfthan] fondffound], prease. Plurals of nouns in es: woundes, worldes; plural and infinitive in verbs in en: been, doen, marchen, to looken, to keepen. 41 OUTLINE XXI The Early Drama I. RELIGIOUS AND DIDACTIC DRAMA. 1. Church Plays (beginning in the loth century). Short dialogues in Latin delivered as part of the liturgy, chiefly at Easter, Christmas and Epiphany. 2. Mystery Plays (English). Substantially comprised in four Cycles of the I4th and I5th centuries: a. Chester Plays (25 pageants). b. Coventry Plays, or Ludus Coventriae (43 pageants). c. York Plays (48 pageants). d. Towneley Plays (32 pageants). Morality Plays, or Moralities (i5th and l6th centuries). a. Universal moralities. Castle of Perseverance. Mankind. Everyman. b. Limited moralities. Hycke-Scorner. Wit and Science. 4. Interludes. John Hey wood (fl. 1520-35), attached to the court of Henry VIII. Some of his plays are didactic and some purely farcical. a. The Play of the Weather. ' b. The Play of Love. c. The Merry Play between Johan the Husband, Tyb his Wife, and Sir John the Priest. 9 5 3 d. The Four PP. e. The Merry Play between the Pardoner and the Friar, the Curate and Neighbor Pratt. ,5-3$ II. THE TRANSITION TO THE REGULAR DRAMA. Gammer Gurton's Needle (1552-53). Influence of Plautus and Terence. 1. Comedy. a. Domestic comedy in verse. b. Classical comedy in verse. Ther sites (i537)- V /- Ralph Roister Doister (c. 1553). Jack Juggler (iSSS^SSS). c. Prose comedy (See George Gascoigne, Outline XV). 2. Tragedy. Influenced by Seneca. ^Gorboduc, or Ferrex and Porrcx (1562), by Thomas Norton Thomas Sackville. Blank verse. 3. Historical Plays. a. Bale: King John (before 1548). b. The Troublesome Reign of King John (in print by 1591). and 43 OUTLINE XXII Court and School Plays I. DRAMATIC COMPANIES. Until 1587, sixteenth century drama was closely connected with the court. Early actors at court were Children of the Chapel Royal and the Boys of St. Paul's. Later professional companies under patronage of great nobles performed at court and in public theaters. II. EARLY PLAYHOUSES. Up to 1576 professional performances had been held in the inn yards. The public theaters were built beyond the city jurisdiction as follows: 1. The Theater, erected 1576 in Finsbury Fields by James Burbage. 2. The Curtain, built soon afterward, in the same region. 3. The Rose, erected 1592 on the Bankside. 4. The Swan, erected 1594-98 on the Bankside. 5. The Globe, erected 1599 on the Bankside. III. COLLEGE PLAYS. 1. Latin Tragedies. a. Richardns Tertius, by Legge (1579). b. Dido, by Gager (1583). 2. Comedies. Largely satirical. a. Latin. Pedantius (1581). Bcllwn Grammatical* (1581). b. English. The Pilgrimage to Parnassus (1598). The Return from Parnassus (2 parts, 1601, 1602). IV. JOHN LYLY AND COURT DRAMA. (See also Outline XVIII.) jLyly's plays : 1. Campaspe (1584). 2. Sapho and Phao (1584). * 3. Endimion (1591). 4. Gallathea (1592). 5. Midas (1592). v 6. Mother Bombie (1594). 7. The Woman in the Moon (1597). 8. Love's Metamorphosis (1601). All of these plays are in prose with occasional intermixture of lyric verse, except The Woman in the Moon, which is in blank verse. All are on pastoral or mythological subjects with the exception of Mother Bombie. Many of them show thinly veiled political allegory appropri- ate to current events. The style of all is strongly marked with Eu- phuism. 45 OUTLINE XXIII Kyd, Marlowe, Greene, Peele I. THOMAS KYD (1558-1595?). Son of a scrivener. Educated _at Mer- chant Taylors' School. In 1570 entered the service of a lord, perhaps Earl of Essex. Translated (1588) The Householder's Philosophy from Tasso, and Cornelia from Gamier. Introduced the popular Revenge Tragedy, a type marked by strong influence from Seneca, much blood- shed, usually on the stage, a revenge motive, often by the use of the ghost, and by madness. ^ T. The Spanish Tragedy (performed about 1586). --- 2. The earlier Hamlet (performed about 1588). II. CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE (1564-1593). The most considerable dramatic poet before Shakspere. May have collaborated in early plays of Shak- spere. Born at Canterbury; educated at King's School, Canterbury, and at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. May have served as soldier in the Low Countries. Was a free-thinker. Lived a wild life. Died as re- sult of wound received in tavern affray at Deptford, June, 1593. Plays - (dates those of performance) : 1. Tamburlaine (parts i and 2, 1587). 2. Dr. Faustus (1588). 3. The Jew of Malta (1589). 4. Edward II (c. 1590). Chronicle play. III. ROBERT GREENE (1558?-! 592). Born at Norwich. Educated St. John's College, Cambridge. Wrote romances, lyrics, plays, and controversial pamphlets. Lived an unhappy and irregular life. On his deathbed wrote A Groatszvorth of Wit, in which is found the first contemporary allusion to Shakspere. Plays (dates those of performance) :> 1. Alphonsus of Arragon (1587). 2. A Looking-Glass for London of England (written in conjunction with Lodge c. 1587). 3. Orlando FuriosD (1588). * 4. Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay (1589). 5. James IV (1590). 6. George-a-Greene (questionable authorship; 1590). JV. GEORGE PEELE (1558-1597). 1. The Arraignment of Paris (1584). Poetic drama. 2. The Battle of Alcazar (c. 1594). Tragedy showing Senecan influence. 3. The Old Wives' Tale (1595). , 4. David and Bethsabe (1599). 47 OUTLINE XXIV Life of William Shakspere William Shakspere was born at Stratford-on-Avon, and was baptized April 26, 1564. He was the first son and the third child of John Shakspere, a free- holder, in 1568 High Bailiff of Stratford, and Mary Arden Shakspere.~ Shak- spere probably attended the Stratford Grammar School; reminiscences of this school are suspected in his early play Love's Labor's Lost. Tradition assigns many vocations to Shakspere's youth; one legend holds that he 'exercised his father's trade ' of butcher. After the young Shakspere's eighth year his father's affairs, which had before flourished, began to decline. Early in life (in 1582 or early 1583) William Shakspere married Anne Hathaway, a woman eight years his senior. In 1583 his first daughter was born. Hamnet and Judith, twins, were born early in 1585. Well credited tradition tells that about this time Shakspere was prosecuted for poaching in the park of Sir Thomas Lucy at Charlecote. Allusion may be made to this experience in Merry Wives of Windsor and 2 Henry IV. Shakspere's knowledge of the stage may have begun in 1587, in which year five companies of actors gave theatrical performances at Stratford. After 1585 nothing is heard of him until 1592, and it is supposed that he spent a large portion of these seven years in theatrical apprenticeship in London. He was probably attached to Burbage's house ' The Theater,' and may early have joined the company of the Earl of Leicester. Shakspere acted in Jon- son's Every Man in His Humor (1598) and Sejanus (1603) ; possibly also he played the part of the Ghost in Hamlet and of Adam in As You Like It. The earliest allusion to Shakspere is seen in Robert Greene's tract A Groats- worth of Wit (1592) in the words, 'the only Shake-scene in a country' in which he appears to be condemned as an adapter of other men's plays. In /i 593 he dedicated Venus and Adonis, and in 1594 Lucrece, to the Earl of Southampton. In 1598 Francis Meres in the Wit's Treasury accounts Shak- spere among the English the most excellent in both comedy and tragedy. Among poems Meres mentions Venus and Adonis, Lucrece, and Sonnets; among comedies he mentions The Two Gentlemen of Verona, The Comedy of Errors, Love's Labor's Lost, Love's Labors Won (All's Well that Ends Well}, Midsummer Night's Dream, and The Merchant of Venice; among tragedies he mentions Richard the Second, Richard the Third, Henry the Fourth, King John, Titus Andronicus, and Romeo and Juliet. There are other evidences of Shakspere's early success. In 1596 applica- tion was made in the name of John Shakspere for the grant of a coat-of-arms. In 1597 Shakspere purchased New Place, the largest house in Stratford. He probably spent the last five years of his life in this house, his work as a play- wright being practically complete after The Tempest (1611). Shakspere died April 23, 1616, and was buried in Stratford. He left 350 pounds in money, much real estate and personal property, a fortune in the time of Elizabeth. An authentic portrait by Martin Droeshout is to be found in the First Folio 49 OUTLINE XXV Sources of Shakspere's Plays I. SHAKSPERE AND CLASSICAL AUTHORS. 1. Latin. a. Ovid, Virgil, Seneca, probably well known in the original Latin. b. Pliny was possibly known in Holland's translation. c. Plautus was possibly known in the translation of the Mencechmi by 'W. w.' d. Many references to Latin authors in Shakspere's plays should be ascribed to his use of Lyly's Latin Grammar at school. 2. Greek. a. Plutarch's Lives was known to Shakspere in North's translation (1579, 1595). Upon North's Plutarch are based entirely or in part: Julius Casar; Coriolanus; Antony and Cleopatra. b. Homer was known either in Hall's translation (1581) or Chapman's (1598). ONTINENTAL SOURCES. 1. Montaigne's Essays were known in Florio's translation (1603). 2. Boccaccio's Novels were known through Painter's Palace of Pleasure. Upon a story in this was based All's Well that Ends Well. From Boc- caccio is derived indirectly, perhaps through Holinshed and an old play, the story of Cymbeline. 3. Cinthio's Hecatommithi provides the story of Othello, probably an old play. 4. Jorge de Montemayor's La Diana, in translation by Bartholomew Yong (1598) provides the story of The Two Gentlemen of Verona. III. ENGLISH SOURCES. 1. English Fiction. a. Arthur Brooke's poem Romeus and Juliet (1562) provides the story of Romeo and Juliet. ). Thomas Lodge's romance, Rosalynde (1590), provides story of As You Like It. c. Robert Greene's Pandosto (1588) provides story of Winter's Tale. 2. English Historical Compendiums. . 5 17 Raphael Holinshed's Chronicles.' Upon these are mainly based: King Henry VI. (3 parts.) King Richard III.- King Henry VIII. King Henry IV. (2 parts.) King Henry V. 3. Old English Plays. Upon these are based King John, King Lear, The Taming of the Shrew, Measure for Measure, and possibly Ham- let, The Merchant of Venice, Timon of Athens, and Twelfth Night. 5i OUTLINE XXVI Shakspere's Works: Poems and Comedies POEMS. 1. Venus and Adonis (printed, 1593). Based upon Ovid's Metamorphoses and Lodge's S cilia's Metamorphosis (1589). Written in six line stanzas. 2. The Rape of Lucrece (printed, 1594). Based upon Ovid, Chaucer, and Samuel Daniel's Complaint of Rosamond (1592). Written in rime royal and like Venus and Adonis dedicated to the Earl of Southampton. 3. Sonnets. Of these 154 are extant outside the plays. The majority were probably written in 1593 and 1594. They were printed surrep- titiously by Thomas Thorpe in 1609. 4. A Passionate Pilgrim (printed, 1599). A collection containing five of Shakspere's sonnets. 5. The Phoenix and the Turtle (printed, 1601). A collection containing 13 four line stanzas said to be by Shakspere. 6. A Lover's Complaint. Printed with the sonnets, 1609. II. COMEDIES. 1. Early Comedy. Shakspere's craftsman period. Plays marked by arti- fice, mistaken identity, much rime and verbal conceit. a. Love's Labor's Lost (written, c. 1591). b. The Comedy of Errors (written, c. 1591). c. The Two Gentlemen of Verona (written, c. 1591). d. A Midsummer Night's Dream (written, c. 1595). 2. The Middle Period of Comedy. The Merchant of Venice (acted, c. 1596). 3. Shakspere's Maturity in Comedy. a. A rough and boisterous type verging on farce. Not in his best style. The Taming of the Shrew (written, c. 1596). The Merry Wives of Windsor (acted, c. 1598). b. An idyllic comedy of refined emotion. Much Ado About Nothing (acted, 1599). As You Like It (acted, 1599). Twelfth Night, or What You Will (acted, 1599). c. The comedy of sober thought, of irony and disillusion. All's Well That Ends Well (written, c. 1602). Troilus and Cressida (written, 1603). Measure for Measure (acted, 1604). 4. The Final Period, marking the last stage of Shakspere's dramatic evolution. Romantic comedy of philosophy and reconciliation. a. Pericles, Prince of Tyre (printed, 1608). b. Cymbeline (acted, 1610-11). c. The Winter's Tale (acted, 1611). d. The Tempest (written, 1611). S3 OUTLINE XXVII Shakspere's Works: Histories and Tragedies I. HISTORIES. 1. Pseudo-Shaksperean. Henry VI. Part I (acted, 1592). An early type of the plays"~of blooc and bombast. Barely touched by Shakspere. Compare with Titus am Andronicus under Tragedies. 2. The Marlowe-Shakspere Group. Showing the influence of Marlowe in substance, structure, and style Marlowe was probably chiefly concerned in the first two, the thin was written by Shakspere in Marlowe's manner. a. The Second Part of Henry the Sixth (acted, 1592). b. The Third Part of Henry the Sixth (acted, 1592). c. Richard III (1593). 3. Histories of the Middle Period. Shakspere's assumption of an indi vidual method. All save the first have an admixture of comedy (cf comedy of this period, Outline XXVI), and the last three belong tc the Falstaff group (cf. Merry Wives of Windsor}. a. King John (adapted, 1594). b. Richard II (printed, 1597). c. The First Part of Henry the Fourth (written, 1597). d. The Second Part of Henry the Fourth (written, 1597). e. Henry the Fifth (acted, 1599). II. TRAGEDIES. 1. Pseudo-Shaksperean Tragedy: play of revenge and blood. Only par tially by Shakspere. Titus Andronicus (acted, 1594). 2. Early Tragedy. Tragedy of youthful passion, (cf. Shakspere's earl) poems.) Romeo and Juliet (written, 1591). 3. Tragedy of Maturity of Method. Separated from Romeo and Julie, by almost entire history group and most of the comedies. The trag edy of thought. a. Julius C&sar (acted, 1601). b. Hamlet (acted, 1602). 4. The Last Phase of Tragedy. Tragedy of personal flaw or fault character: ambition, ingratitude, lust, etc. a. Othello, The Moor of Venice (acted, 1604). b. King Lear (acted, 1606). c. Macbeth (written, 1606). d. Timon of Athens (written, c. 1607). e. Antony and Cleopatra (written, 1608). *f. Coriolanus (written, c. 1609). ir > OUTLINE XXVIII Jonson and Chapman I. BEN JONSON. 1. Life. Ben Jonson was born in 1572. He was educated in Westmin- ster School,' was a brick-layer, soldier in the Low Countries and actor. iHe began writing for the stage about 1595, and was himself an actor, possibly in the pseudo-Kydean play Jeronimo. Killed a performer in a duel, was imprisoned and released through 'benefit of clergy.' At- tacked Marston and Dekker, brother dramatists, in Cynthia's Revels and The Poetaster. Was attacked in turn in Dekker's Satiromastix. With Chapman and Marston offended King James by reflections on the Scottish nation in Eastward Hoe. Regained favor and was appointed laureate. In later life Jonson knew many vicissitudes of fortune. Died August 6, 1637. Buried in Poets' Corner, Westminster Abbey. 2. Characteristics, as a Dramatist. Jonson announced in his first play, Every Man in his Humor, his purpose to revolutionize dramatic art. Repudiates the dramatic ideas of Shakspere. Bases his plays upon an elaboration of eccentric character and on classical rather than romantic idea. Plays marked by great learning, satire, warfare on pretenders, and lack of action. Wrote some fifty plays, mostly masques and in- terludes. 3. Jonson's Works. a. Comedy of Humors. Every Man in His Humor (1598). Every Man out of His Humor (1599). b. Realistic Comedy. Volpone (1606); Epiccene (1609); The Alchemist (1610); Bartholo^ mew Fair (1614). c. Classical Tragedy. Se janus (1603); Catiline (1611). d. Pastoral Drama: The Sad Shepherd (1634). e. Masque: The Masque of Queens (1609) ; The Golden Age Restored (1615) ; Oberon (1611). II. GEORGE CHAPMAN (1559-1634). Translator of Homer. Friend of Spen- ser, Jonson, and Shakspere. Undramatic but weird and poetic. 1. Comedies. a. The Blind Beggar of Alexandria (1598). b. All Fools (1605). c. Monsieur D' Olive (1605). d. Eastward Hoe (1605). With Jonson and Marston. e. The Gentleman Usher (1606). 2. Tragedies. a. The Tragedy of Charles Duke of Byron (1608). b. The Revenge of Bussy D'Ambois (1613). 57 i/ OUTLINE XXIX The Drama to the Closing of the Theatres I. JOHN WEBSTER. Life obscure. Unmatched outside of Shakspere in pa- thos and tragic intensity. i. The White Demi (1608 acted). J2. The Duchess of Main (acted, 1616).;** 3. Appius and Virginia (acted, 1639). II. THOMAS MIDDLETON (1570?-! 627). 1. The Changeling (with Rowley) (acted, 1623). 2. The Spanish Gypsy (acted, 1623). 3. Women beware Women (1657). :/ III. THOMAS DEKKER (1570-1639?). A grolific and realistic playwright, /i. The Shoemaker's Holiday (1600). 2. Old Fortunatus (1600). 3. Satiromastix (1602). Directed against Jonson. IV. BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER. 1. Francis Beaumont (1584-1616). Son of a judge. Studied at Oxford and for law. Friend of Jonson and member of the Mermaid Tavern group. 2. John Fletcher (1579-1625). Son of an ecclesiastic. Educated at Cambridge. Had share with Shakspere in Henry VIII and Two Noble Kinsmen. Died of plague. Between Beaumont and Fletcher there were composed 52 plays, a masque, and minor poems. It is now almost impossible to allocate authorship. Plays by Beaumont and Fletcher: a. Philaster (acted, 1608). b. The Maid's Tragedy (acted, 1609). c. The Knight of the Burning Pestle (acted, 1610-11). d. A King and No King (licensed, 1611). V. JOHN FORD (1586-1640). 1. The Witch 'of Edmonton (1621). With Dekker. Q-Ov^- 2. The Broken Heart (1633). Last great romantic tragedy before 1642. VI. DOMESTIC TRAGEDY. A realistic tragedy based on contemporary crime or sensational event. ^~ i. Thomas Hey wood: A Woman Killed With Kindness (acted, 1603). 2. Anonymous: Arden of Feversham (1592); A Warning for Fair Women (1598); A Yorkshire Tragedy (1605). VII. OTHER PLAYS. Marston: Antonio's Revenge (1602); Chettle: Trag- edy of Hoffman (1631) ; Massinger : ^ /I New Way to Pay Old Debts (1633)- i 59 OUTLINE XXX The English Bible I. TRANSLATIONS BEFORE MODERN TIMES. 1. Bede in old age translated St. John. 2. Aldheim made a version of the Psalter. 3. King Alfred translated the Four Evangelists. 4. JElfric translated the first seven books of the Old Testament. All of these were paraphrases from the Vulgate, the Latin version of Scriptures made by St. Jerome at close of 4th century. II. TRANSLATIONS OF MODERN TIMES. 1. John Wyclif (1324-1384). ' The last of the Schoolmen and first of the Reformers.' Wyclif was assisted by : v a. Nicholas of Hereford who translated the first part to the third book of Baruch; ^^vb. John Purvey, Wyclif s curate, who, in 1388, revised the translation. Many marks of Wyclif's bible remain in the translated Bible of to- day. 2. William Tyndale (1484-1536). ' He was singularly addicted to the study of the Scriptures.' (Foxe.) a. In 1526 issued from Germany a translation of the New Testament. b. In 1530 issued translation of the Pentateuch. c. In 1531 issued translation of Book of Jonah. The nature of Tyndale's work is indicated by the fact that the King James' Version includes what is practically a modernization of Tyn- dale's New Testament. Revisions of Tyndale's Bible occur under the names of: a. Matthew's Bible, by John Rogers (1537) ; b. The Great Bible, prepared by Cranmer (1539) ; c. Richard Taverner's Bible (based on Matthew, 1539). 3. Miles Coverdale published in 1535 the first English version of the whole Bible. 4. Other Translations. The Geneva Bible (1557), The Bishop's Bible (1568), and The Douay Bible (1582-1610) have secondary literary value. 5. The King James Bible, undertaken 1604, an original work of great scholarship, has held its place as one of the finest products of English literature. 6l OUTLINE XXXI y Seventeenth Century Prose I. THE SCIENTIFIC MOVEMENT. 1. Francis Bacon (1561-1626). Son of Nicholas Bacon. His character: intellectual predominating over the moral. Anti-Aristotelian philoso- pher. He places observation and experiment in place of speculation. His projected reconstruction of the sciences, of the arts, and of human knowledge. Prose works: a. Essays (1597; 1612; 1625). Shrewd, terse, politic, devoid of sen- timent. b. The Advancement of Learning (1605). Represents a summary of the world's knowledge. c. Novum Organum (1620). Represents Bacon's scientific inductive method. i^ju^ &&**&+ / b ^7 2. Thomas Browne (1605-1682). Prose marked by learning, eloquence, and rhythm. a. Religio Medici (1642); b. Urn Burial (1658). 3. Robert Burton (1577-1640). Anatomy of Melancholy (1621). Encyclopaedic learning, conceits, fancy in the garb of science. II. PROBLEMS OF GOVERNMENT AND EDUCATION. Treated in a heavy and scientific manner. Some controversial, as related to the political activi- ties of the times. i^ Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679). v a. De Corpore Politico (1650). b. Leviathan (1651). Defense of pure monarchy. 2. John Milton (1608-1674). (See Outline XXXIII.) 3. John Locke (1632-1704) : Essay concerning Human Understanding (1690). III. CHARACTER WRITING. i. Joseph Hall (1574-1656): Characters of Virtues and Vices (1608). ^ 2. Thomas Overbury (1581-1613): Characters (1614). 3. John Earle (1601-1665) : Microcosmographie (1628). IV. THEOLOGICAL WRITERS. 1. Jeremy Taylor (1613-1667). a. The Liberty of Prophesying (1647). b. Holy Living (1650) ; Holy Dying (1651). 2. Thomas Fuller (1608-1661). ' a. The Holy State (1642). b. Worthies of England (1662). 3. John Bunyan. (See Outline XXXVII.) PASTORAL PROSE. i. Izaak Walton (1593-1683): The Compleat Angler (1653). r l. CRITICISM. John Dryden. (See Outline XXXVI.) VII. DIARISTS. Samuel Pepys (1633-1703) : Diary (1660-69; deciphered and published, 1828). John Evelyn (1620-1706): Diary (1641-1706; printed, 1818). 63 OUTLINE XXXII The Seventeenth Century Lyric I. THE METAPHYSICAL IMPULSE. John Donne (1573-1631) influenced all other poets of the century. Poetry marked by subtlety of thought, rich- ness in scientific and philosophical conceits, fantastic expressions, and far-fetched analogies and metaphors. II. THE CAVALIER LYRISTS. Their poems marked by facility and finish, grace and melody. 1. Thomas Carew (1598-1639). ^o^xJ / 2. Richard Lovelace (i6i8-i658).^ The Purple Island (1633). IV. DEVOTIONAL POETS. Marked by the aristocratic ease of the Cavalier poets, and by the conceits of the metaphysical order of poetry. 1. The Pastoral Group. a. Robert Herrick (1591-1674). Hesperides (1648). Noble Numbers (1648). b. Andrew Marvell (1621-1678). 2. The Religious Group. a. Giles Fletcher, the younger (1588-1623). Christ's Victory and Triumph (1610). b. George Herbert (1593-1633). c. Richard Crashaw (1613-1650?). d. Henry Vaughan (1622-1695'). V. THE CLASSICAL REACTION. 1. Edmund Waller (1606-1687). First successfully used the closed coup- let later adopted by Dryden. a. Poems (1645, 1664). b. Divine Love (1685). 2. Sir John Denham (1615-1669). Cooper's Hill (1642). 3. Abraham Cowley (1618-1667). The Mistress (1647). Also writer of plays and of a biblical epic, Davideis (1656). OUTLINE XXXIII S Milton: Life and Works I. LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. Born in London, December 9, 1608. After at- tending St. Paul's School, London, went to Christ's College,nCambridge (1625-29). Revoked his intention of taking holy orders, and gave him- self up to literature. 1632-38, in studious retirement at Horton. Read classical authors and frequently visited London to take lessons in math- ematics and music. 1638-39, traveled on the Continent, chiefly in Italy, where he was received as a distinguished man of letters. Upon his re- turn to England he settled in London as a writer and private tutor. In 1643 married Mary Powell. Published numerous tracts on political, social, and religious subjects. 1649-60, Latin Secretary to the Council of State under the Commonwealth. By 1653 had become totally blind. At the Restoration (1660) was under arrest for a time. From 1660 until his death (1674) lived in literary retirement in London. II. WORKS. i. Early Poems. a. On the Morning of Christ's Nativity (written, 1629). b. Sonnet on His being Arrived at the Age of Twenty-three (written, 1631). c. Arcades (c. 1630-3). d. U Allegro (written, 1634). e. // Penseroso (written,_i634). f. Comiis (acted at Ludlow Castle, 1634). g. Lycidas (elegy on the death of Edward King, drowned 1637). Prose. a. An Apology for Smectymnuus (1642). An argument against episco- pacy, in support of those writers who, under the name ' Smectym- nuus,' had replied to Bishop Hall's Humble Remonstrance (1641). b. The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce (1643). A defense of di- vorce, written as the result of his unhappy marriage (1643) with Mary Powell. c. Areopagitica: A Speech for the Liberty of Unlicensed Printing (1644)- d. Tractate on Education (1644).^ e. The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates (1649). Expounds the right of a people to resist the oppression of a monarch. f. Eikonoklastes (1649). Directed against Eikon Basilike, a glorifica- tion of Charles I that had appeared immediately after his execution (1649). Later Poems. a. Sonnets. b. Paradise Lost (1667, 1674). (See Outline XXXIV.) c. Paradise Regained (1671). d. Samson Agonistes (1671). 67 OUTLINE XXXIV v Milton: Paradise Lost I. PUBLICATION. Published, 1667, in 10 Books. Second edition, 1674, in 12 BooksT {Bks vii and x of 1st edition divided into 2 books each.) II. POSSIBLE SOURCES. Andreini : Adamo (1613). Scriptural drama in Italian recounting many of the Scriptural occurrences recounted in Paradise Lost. Vondel : Lucifer (1654). Tragedy in Dutch recounting the rebellion of the angels. Grotius : Adamus Exul (1601), in Latin. A large number of poems on kindred subjects were published during the ist half of I7th century, especially in Italian. III. GENESIS OF THE POEM. By 1642 Milton had made several outlines for a poem, in the form of a Greek tragedy, on the subject of the Fall of Man. After having been laid aside for a term of years, the work was resumed about 1658, in the form of an epic. (Milton had become blind about 1653). The poem was substantially complete about 1663. IV. COSMOGRAPHY. The astronomical system represented in the poem is not our present Copernican system, but the older Ptolemaic system. According to the Ptolemaic system the earth is the fixed center of the universe, and the ap- parent motions of the other celestial bodies are caused by the real revolu- tions of successive heavens, or spheres, enclosing the central earth at different distances. V. ARGUMENT. Book I. Hell. The Fallen Angels. Book II. The Consultation in Hell. Satan's Departure for the Earth. Book III. Heaven. Satan is seen flying towards the Earth. The Con- sultation in Heaven. Book IV. The Garden of Eden. The Arrival of Satan. Book V. * God to render man inexcusable sends Raphael to admonish him.' \ Book VI. Raphael's account of the battle in Heaven. Triumph of the Messiah and Expulsion of Satan. Book VII. Raphael's account of the Creation. Book VIII. Raphael and Adam discuss the Cosmogony. Adam relates what he remembers since his own creation. Book IX. The Temptation and Fall. Book X. The Judgment of God. The Triumph of Satan. The Re- morse of Adam and Eve. Book XI. God sends Michael to expel them from Eden. He prophesies < the History of Man till the Flood. Book XII. Michael continues the History of Man to the second Advent. The Expulsion from Paradise. D.w^> ~V , V^Mf^ ^3- ^70 $^JLS~ y^^. r 4- v^ \^ ^-^ J& N OUTLINE XXXV The Restoration Drama I. THE FIRST RESTORATION PLAY. Jacobean drama had come to an end in 16^2. In 1656 Sir William D'Avenant (1605-1668) a Royalist and the poet laureate erectetha-private stage and produced thereon The Siege of Rhodes. In this entertainment dramatic machinery was for the first time introduced from France. In 1660 D'Avenant and Killegrew secured a patent for the first Restoration playhouse. On this stage, music, scenery and the curtain were used as on the modern stage. II. HEROIC PLAYS. A type of play specifically defended by Dryden and prac- j^jtised by him from 1664-1678. It is characterized by bombast and written in rimed couplets. 1. Roger Boyle, Earl of Orrery (1621-1679). 1 Mustapha, the Son of Solyman the Magnificent (1665). 2. Dryden (see Outline XXXVI). a. The Indian Emperor (1665). b. Almansor and Almahide, or the Conquest of Granada (1670). 3. Nathaniel Lee (i653?-i692). Nero, Emperor of Rome (1675). 4. Thomas Otway (1652-1685). Don Carlos (1675). III. TRAGEDY. 1. Thomas Otway. a. The Orphan (1680). b. Venice Preserved (1682). ' The best tragedy since Shukspere/ 2. Dryden. , T~~ > All for Love, or The World Well Lost (1678). < fe"*jw S^a*,1 c 3. Nicholas Rowe (1673-1718). Jane Shore (1714) ; Lady Jane Gray (1715). IV. THE COMEDY OF MANNERS. Prose comedies characterized by the ex- treme of French influence, particularly from Moliere. The plays are witty, worldly and licentious. They are also keenly observant of con- temporary manners, and precise in diction and structure. 1. Sir George Etherege (i6^4?-i6gi a. The Comical Revenge (i66V x b. The Man of Mode 2. Sir Charles Sedley (1639-1701). The Mulberry 'Garden (1668). 3. William Wycherly (1640-1715). Jill. Vli.' 1691)^ %)( a. The Country Wife (acted, 1673), b. The Plain Dealer (acted, 1674). 4. William Congreve (1670-1729). frtf T rt? a. 1 mi 695)- -sVftb. The Wav of the World 5. Sir John Vanbrugh (1664-1726). a. The Relapse (1697). b. The Provoked Wife (1698). 6. George Farquhar (1678-1707). The Beaux' Stratagem (1707), (O^A^ 71 tv^^^<^\ OUTLINE XXXVI Dryden: Life and Works I. LIFE OF JOHN DRYDEN. Born at Aldwinkle All Saints, Northampton- shire, August 9 (?), 1631. Attended Westminster School, London. Graduated at Trinity College, Cambridge, 1654. Originally a Parliamen- tarian, became later a Royalist. Poet Laureate, 1670-88. Converted to Roman Catholicism, 1686. Died in London, May i, 1700. ^P(t/U* CJ J/\A ovo / ^^X^HVJ JL{*K III. POEMS. i. Early Occasional Poems. a. Heroic Stanzas on the Death of Cromwell b. ^^^R^du^^j^So} . Confroversial Foems. a. Absalom and Achitophel (1681). b. The Medal (1682). c. MacFlecknoe(i6&2). d. Religio Laid (1682). e. The Hind and the Panther (1687). 3. Lyrics. a. Song for St. Cecilia's Day (1687). b. Alexander's Feast (1697). 4. Translation. jEneid of Virgil (1697). DRAMATIC WORKS. 1. Heroic Plays. a. The TndJQft. Ktwpprnr (1665). b. Tyrannic Love, or the Royal Martyr (1669). c. Alamansor and Almahide, or the Conquest of Granada (1670- 1672). d. Aurengzebe (1675). 2. Comedies? a. The_ Wild Gallant (1662-63). \)kc* cW jU** b. TfizJjfatal / ndiei (1664). c. Sir Martin Mar- A II (1667). d. Marriage a la Mode (1672). b. Don Sebastian (1690). IV. PROSE. 1. Essay of Dramatic Poesy (1668) 2. Essay on Heroic Plays (1672). -^ - V> i "" OUTLINE XXXVII John Bunyan I. LIFE. Born Elstow, near Bedford, 1628. Son of a tinker. At seventeen drafted into the Parliamentary army. Early reading, Plain Mart's Path- way to Heaven and Practice of Piety. Married, 1649. Joined Christian Fellowship, incorrectly called Baptist, 1653. Began preaching, 1655. A ' prisoner for conscience's sake ' in Bedford Jail, 1660-1672. Became licensed preacher under Declaration of Indulgence. Upon withdrawal of his license, served six months in jail, 1675, during which time he wrote the first part of Pilgrim's Progress. Died, 1688. II. BUNYAN'S WORKS. Composed some sixty books. 1. Some Gospel Truths Opened (1656). His first book, against the Quakers. 2. The Holy City, Resurrection of the Dead, and Grace Abounding, all written during twelve years' incarceration. Grace Abounding is an . autobiography. 3- Pilgrim's Progress (ist part, 1678; 2d part, 1684). Nt 4. The Holy War (1682). III. INFLUENCES ON PILGRIM'S PROGRESS. 1. The Dream Allegory. a. Langland: Piers Plowman. (See Outline VIII.) b. Spenser: The Faery Queen. (See Outline XX.) 2. The Pilgrimage Allegory. a. Guillaume de Guileville (fl. c. 1360. Paris) : Le Pelerinage de I'Homme. b. Lydgate: The Pilgrimage of the Life of Man (1426?). English version of the preceding. c. Geiler von Kaiserberg: Christliche Pilgerschaft zum Ewigen Vater- land (1512). 3. Moral Allegory. Richard Bernard (1567-1641). The Isle of Man (1627). 4. Moral Homily. Arthur Dent: The Plain Man's Pathway to Heaven (c. 1590). IV. CHARACTERISTICS OF PILGRIM'S PROGRESS. Style based on that of the Bible and Fox's Book of Martyrs studied in Bedford Jail. Pure and homely English. Words of two syllables. Allegory transparent in the names of the characters. Many characteris- tics of the novel. Human interest. Realistic treatment. Clear charac- terization. English atmosphere and scenery. / OUTLINE XXXVIII Defoe and the Beginnings of Journalism I. LIFE OF DANIEL DEFOE. Born in London, i66i(?). Received a gooc education in a dissenting academy at Newington Green^ Althougl trained for the dissenting ministry, he entered mercantile business Wrote numerous tracts on political subjects. Defended character am policies of King William (See The Trueborn Englishman). As a resul of his pamphlet, The Shortest Way with the Dissenters, was imprisoned 1703-04. Later took an active part in politics, and served the govern ment several times as secret agent. Began novel-writing late in life witf Robinson Crusoe (1719). Died, 1731. II. WORKS OF DEFOE. 1. Pamphlets. Of the large number of occasional pamphlets the follow- ing are examples: a. The Occasional Conformity of Dissenters (1698). v/ b. The Shortest Way with the Dissenters (1702). c. Reasons against the Succession of the House of Hanover (1713). 2. Periodical Writing. a. A Review of the Affairs of France (1704-13). Appeared at first once, later twice, and finally thrice a week. An im- aginary ' Scandal Club ' contributed to its pages. Written entirely b) Defoe. A landmark in English periodical literature. Helped tc suggest The Toiler and The Spectator. (See Outline XL.) b. Other periodicals and newspapers. During the periods indicated Defoe was in some way connectec with the following: Mercurius Politicus (1716-20) ; The Whitehal Evening Post (1718-20); The Daily Post (1719-25); Applebce't Journal (1720-26). 3. Novels. a. Robinson Crusoe (1719-20},^ b. Captain Singleton (1720). c. Moll Flanders (1722). d. Colonel Jack (1722). e. Jonathan Wild (1725)., III. JOURNALISM BEFORE AND AFTER DEFOE. 1. Distribution of News. a. The Weekly News (1622-41). b. The Intelligencer (begun, 1663). Edited by Roger L'Estrange. c. The London Gazette (1666 to present time). d. The Daily C our ant (begun, 1702). The first English daily paper. 2. Editorial Commentary and Criticism. a. The Taller (1709-11). (See Outline XL.) 1). The Spectator (1711-12, 1714). (See Outline XL.) 77 OUTLINE XXXIX Jonathan Swift I. LIFE. Born Hoey's Court, Dublin, 1667. At Kilkenny Grammar School, 1674-82. B.A., ' by special grace,' Trinity College, Dublin, 1686. Pro- tege of Sir William Temple, at Moor Park, 1688-99. Took orders, 1695. Laracor, 1700. Active in controversy and political intrigue. Intimate with Tory ministers, 1710-14. Edited Examiner, 1710-11. Disappointed of a bishopric, accepted Deanery of St. Patrick's, Dublin, 1713. Death of Queen Anne and Fall of Tory Party, 1714. From this time, resided mainly in Ireland. Last years excessively melancholy, especially after the death of * Stella' (Esther Johnson), 1728. Became violently insane, 1741. Died 1745, leaving his fortune to found a lunatic asylum in Dublin. II. WRITINGS. 1. Poems. Chiefly mocking and satiric in tone. a. Miscellanies (1711). b. Cadenus and Vanessa (written, 1713). 'c. On The Death of Dr. Swift (1731). 2. Controversial Papers. j a. The Battle of the Books (1704, written, 1698):', b. The Tale of a Tub (1704, written, 1696-8). c. Contents and Dissensions in Athens and Rome (1701). d. Sentiments of a Church of England Man (1708). e. Argument against Abolishing Christianity (1708). f. The Conduct of the Allies (1711). g. The Public Spirit of the Whigs (1714). h. Letters of M. B. Drapier (1724). ' i. A Modest Proposal for Preventing the Children of Poor People from being a Burden to their Parents (1729). 3. Prose Miscellanies. / a. Meditation upon a Broomstick (1704). y ''b. Predictions of Isaac Bickerstaif (1708). c. Account of Partridge's Death (1708). d. Polite Conversation (1738). e. Directions for Servants (written before 1738). Journal to Stella (written, 1710-13). Travels of Lemuel Gulliver (1726). 6. The History of the Four Last Years of Queen Anne (1758). III. SIGNIFICANCE. Swift's language is studiously plain; but a savage irony underlies his apparent directness and simplicity, and his criticism is at once penetrating and destructive. He preceded, and his writings and ! conversation powerfully influenced the chief wits of the Queen Anne ^ period and after. The periodicals of Addison and Steele, Pope's satires, / and later, Fielding's novels, show this influence in various ways. 79 OUTLINE XL The Periodical Essay I. FORERUNNERS. 1. Essayists: Bacon, Abraham Cowley. Dryden, Sir William^ Temple. (See Outline XXXI".) 2. Character Writers: Sir Thomas Overbury (1581-1613) ; John Earle, Bishop of Salisbury (d. 1665). (See Outline XXXL) 3. Journalists and Pamphleteers: Sir Roger L'Estrange (1616-1704). (See Outline XXXVIII.) 4. Swift's Bickerstaff Papers. (See Outline XXXIX.) DamgLJlefoe. (See Outline XXXVIII.) II. SIR RICHARD STEELE. 1. Life. Born, Dublin, 1672. Charterhouse School. Christ Church, Ox- ford. Joined Life Guards, 1695, and rose to a captaincy. Began writ- ing for the theater in 1701. Member of the ' Kit-Cat Club.' Ap- pointed Gazetteer, 1707. Successively managed some eight periodi- cals, including The Taller, 1709, and The Spectator^ 1711-14. Twice married. Ejected from House of Commons, 1714. In 1715, became Supervisor of Drury Lane Theater; again elected Member of Parlia- ment; knighted by George I. Badly in debt, retired to Wales, and there died, 1729. 2. Writings. " a. The Christian Hero (1701). A religious manual. b. Plays: The Funeral, or Grief a la Mode (acted, 1702) ; The Loyzr (acted, 1703) ; The Tender Husband (acted, 1705) ^ scio us Lovers ( acted . 1722). c. Periodicals and Pamphlets (1709-22). III. JOSEPH ADDISON. 1. Life. Born, Lichfield, 1672. Charterhouse School. Queen's College, Oxford. Fellow at Magdalen to 1699. Pensioned. Traveled. Lon- don. Intimate with Swift and Steele, about 1705. Contributed to The Tatler and The Spectator, 1809-14. Secretary for Ireland, 1714. The Freeholder, 1715. Commissioner for Trade and the Colonies. 1716. Married to Countess of Warwick. Rupture with Steele caused by political differences. Secretary of State, 1717. Retired with a pension, 1718. Died, 1719. 2. Writings. y a. Poems. The Campaign (1704) made his political fortune. b. Plays: Rosamond (acted, 1706) : Cat a (acted, 1713); political in- terest gave it a long run; The Drummer (acted, 1715). c. Periodicals and pamphlets (1694-1719). IV. CO-OPERATIVE PERIODICALS OF ADDISON AND STEELE. 1. The Tatler (1709-11). -"' 2. The Spectator {1711-12, and 1714), embracing The DeCoverley Papers. 3. The Guardian (1713). Si OUTLINE XLI Alexander Pope I. LIFE. Born Lombard Street, London, 1688, of Catholic parents. Pre- cocious ; privately educated. Claimed to have written his Pastorals, 1704. Friendship and quarrel with Wycherley, 1705-10. Most produc- tive member of the Scriblerus Club, founded by Swift to chastise poetasters and hack-writers. Prologue to Cato, 1713. Rupture with Addison, 1715. With proceeds of Homer translations purchased Twickenham, 1717. Pope quarreled with John Dennis, the critic; Edward Curll, the pub- lisher ; Theobald, the editor of Shakspere ; Colley Cibber, the actor. All these, with many others, figure in The Dunciad. His friendship with Lady Mary Wortley Montagu ended in a feud. Friendships which re- mained more or less intact were those with Swift, Arbuthnot, Gay, Bolingbroke, Warburton, and Martha Blount Died, 1744. II. POEMS. T. Imaginative and elegiac. a. Pastorals (1709). b. The Messiah (1712). The Rape of the Lock (1712-14).,, . Windsor Forest (1713). e. Elegy to the Memory of an Unfortunate Lady (1717). f. Epistle from Eloisa to Abelard (1717). 2. Didactic. T> a. Essay on Criticism (1711). ^-~b. Essay "on Man (1732-34)^ c. Moral Essays (1731-35). 3. Satiric. -~a. The Dunciad (1725, 1729, 1742, 1743). b. Imitations of Horace (1733-37). ^~c. Epistle to Arbuthnot (1735). d. Contributions to the Grub Street Journal (1730-37). 4. Translations. a. Statius' Thebais, Book I (1712). b. The Iliad (1715-18). c. The Odyssey (1725-26). 5. Adaptations. a. The Wife of Bath (Adapted from Chaucer, 1714). b. The Satires of Dr. Donne Versified (1735). III. EDITORIAL WORK. Edition of Shakspere (1725). IV. CORRESPONDENCE. Pope's letters, prefaces, notes and dedications were elaborately mysti- fying and disingenuous. He plotted for the publication of his letters and then abused his friends and publishers for the result. OUTLINE XLII The Eighteenth Century Novel PROSE FORERUNNERS ALLIED TO THE NOVEL. i. Records of Fact. (k^'1 John Evelyn. -' a. Diaries. Samuel Pepys. b. Biography. c. Chronicles of adventures. 2. Romances.^ ^ o^ 3. Realistic Fictions. - a. The DeCoverley Papers. (See Outline XL.) "- b. Defoe's narratives. (See Outline XXXVIII.) __ c. Gulliver's Travels. (See Outline XXXIX.) , 7 ^ 4. Influential Narratives by Foreign Authors. a. Cervantes: Don Quixote. b. Le Sage: Gil Bias. II. CHIEF NOVELISTS. 1. Samuel Richardson (1689-1761). a. Pamela, or Virtue Rewarded (1740).^ b. Clarissa Harlowe (1748).^ c. Sir Charles Grandison (1753). 4 2. Henry Fielding (1707-54). a. Plays. Tom Thumb, the Great (1730). Don Quixote in England (1734). The Intriguing Chambermaid (1734). The Historical Register (1737). b. Novels. The Adventures of Joseph Andrews (1742).'* Jonathan Wild the Great (1743). 5 The History of Tom Jones (1749).^ Amelia (1751). o 3. Tobias Smollett (1721-1771). w- ^ a. The Adventures of Roderick Random (1748).^ b. The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle (i75i).<3 c. The Adventures of Ferdinand, Count Fathoin (1753). d. The Adventures of Sir Launcclot Greaves (1762). X. e. The Expedition of Humphrey Clinker (1771). 4. Laurence Sterne (1713-68). a. The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy (1759-67). . b. Sentimental Journey through France and Italy (1768). III. MINOR FICTION OF THE PERIOD. T. David Simple (1742), by Sarah Fielding. (Novel.) 2. Chrysal t or the Adventures of a Guinea (1760), by Charles Johnstone. (Satiric tale.) Rasselas (1759), by Samuel Johnson. (Didactic romance.) The Castle of Otranto (1764), by Horace Walpole. (Gothic ro- mance.) 5. The Vicar of Wakefield (1766), by Oliver Goldsmith. (Novel.) 6. The Man of Feeling (1771), by Henry Mackenzie. (Sentimental ro- mance.) OUTLINE XLIII Johnson and Boswell I. SAMUEL JOHNSON (1709-84). 1. Life. Born, Lichfield. Studied at Lichfield Grammar School and his father's bookstore. Entered Pembroke College, OxiL>rd7 1728, r mainrng fourteen months. Schoolmaster and hack-writer for ma] years. Married Mrs. Porter, who was twenty-one years his seme With David Garrick, went to seek his fortune in London, 1737. Pu lished his Dictionary, 1755. Pensioned by George III, 1762. Met Be well, 1763. The Club formed, 1764. Intimate with the Thrales (176 80). With Boswell toured the Hebrides, 1773. 2. Literary Activity. a. Poems. $ London (1738). The Vanity of Human Wishes (1749). r Irene, a tragedy (acted, 1749). b. Early hack work. Translation of Lobo's Voyage to Abyssinia (1735). Parliamentary Debates (1740-43). c. Lexicography. Plan of a Dictionary (1747). TN Dictionary of the English Language (1755). d. Periodicals. - The Rambler (1750-52). ' The Idler (1759-60). v e. Rasselas (1759). A didactic romance. f. Biographies, critiques, etc. Life of Savage (1744). / Edition of Shakspere (1759). Lives of the Poets (1779-81). g. Miscellaneous and occasional papers. Letter to Lord Chesterfield (1755). Detection of the Cock Lane Ghost (1763). Taxation No Tyranny (1775). ' Journey to the Western Islands (1775). 3. Conversation. Preserved ' in an authentic and lively manner ' in Boswell's Life. II. JAMES BOSWELL (1740-95). 1. Life. Son of a Scotch laird of Auchinleck, Ayrshire. Educated i the law at Edinburgh and Glasgow. Called to the English bar, 17! An assiduous admirer of great men, Rousseau, Paoli. Attached hi: self to Johnson, 1763. Admitted to the Literary Club, on Johnsoi motion, 1773. 2. Writings. -^ a. Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides with Dr. Johnson (1785). -^ b. Life of Samuel Johnson, L.L.D. (1791). OUTLINE XLIV Dr. Johnson's Circle I. DAVID GARRICK (1717-79). Foremost actor of the time. Manager of Drury Lane Theater. Author of many clever farces, comedies, _pro- logues and adaptations. Johnson said of his death, that it had ' eclipsed the gaiety of nations.' II. III. SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS (1723-92). Portrait-painter of first rank. His character and judgment were highly respected. Goldsmith dedicated to him The Deserted Village, and Boswell the Life of Johnson. Johnson declared him ' the most invulnerable man he knew.' First President of the Royal Academy, 1768. Author of Discourses on painting. OLIVER GOLDSMITH (1728-74). 1. Life. Born Pallas, County Longford, Ireland. Entered Trinity Col- V\ lege, Dublin, 1744. Rejected for holy orders, tried law and then medi- cine. At twenty-six tramped the continent practically without funds. From about 1757, lived in London on proceeds of his writing. His Latin epitaph in Westminster Abbey, by Johnson, declares : ' There was scarcely a species of writing which he did not touch, and he touched none that he did not adorn it' 2. Works. a. Citizen of the World (1760-61). b. The Traveler (1764; begun 1757). c. The Deserted Village (1770). d. The Vicar of Wakcfield (1766). e. The Good Natured Man (1768). f. She Stoops to Conquer (1773).^^^ V. EDMUND BURKE (1729-97). 1. Life. Born in Dublin. Studied at Trinity College and, later, read law at the Middle Temple, London. Editor of Dodsley's Annual Reg- ister, 1759. First Speech in Parliament, 1766. Purchased * Gregories,' 1769. Visit to France, 1773. Fall of the Whigs, 1783. Impeachment of Hastings, 1786. Retirement from Parliament and death of Rich- ard Burke, 1794. 2. Works. ^ Vindication of Natural Society (1756) ; Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful (1756); Thoughts on the Present Discontents (1770); Speech on American Taxation (1774) ; Speech for Conciliation with the Colonies (1775) '^Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790) ; Letters on a Regicide Peace (1796-7). EDWARD GIBBON (1737-94). 1. Life. Born, Putney, Surrey, 1737. Westminster School, 1749. Mag- dalen College, Oxford, 1752. Removed and placed in the household of M. Pavilliard, a Calvinist minister at Lausanne, Switzerland, 1753. Here, he became a sound scholar. Visit to Italy and conception of Decline and Fall, 1764. Settled in London, 1772. ' Joined the Literary Club, 1774. Lausanne, 1783-93. Died in London. 2. Works. X Essai sur r elude de la Litterature (1761) ; The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Vol. I (1776) ;A^ols. II and III (1781) ; Vols. IV. V, and VI ^(1788): Memoirs of his Life and Writings (1796). 89 OUTLINE XLV The Beginnings of Romanticism Particular interest in the Scotch. Settled in London, 1725. Partly written by 1733. Best of the I. THE REACTION. 1. Subject Matter. a. Nature and primitive life. , b. The past. The remote. The unfamiliar. Middle Ages. 2. Style. Diffuseness, freedom, simplicity, archaism. 3. Verse Form. a. Miltonic blank verse. Octosyllabics. Sonnet. b. The Spenserian stanza. c. The ballad. d. Variety of rhythm and melody. 4. Temper. Subjectivity, individualism, spontaneity, melancholy, mystery, sensi- bility, wonder. II. EARLY REACTIONARIES. 1. lames Thomson ( 1700-48). % a. The Seasons ~\ 1 726-30 ) . ^ b. The Castle of Indolence (1748). imitations of Spenser. c. Liberty (1734-36). d. Several tragedies, of slighter interest. 2. Edward Young (1681-1765). Lay fellow of All Souls, Oxford. Took holy orders when advanced in years, 1728. His tragedy, Busiris, 1719, succeeded on the stage. The Complaint, or Night Thoughts on Life, Death and Immortality, 1742-45. v 3. Robert Blair (1699-1746). Scotch minister. 'The Grave, 1743. 4. John Dyer (1700 P-I758). Welshman. Grongar Hill, 1726. The Ruins of Rome, 1740. The Fleece, 1757. 5. William Shenstpne (1714-64). 'The bard of the Leasowes.' The Schoolmistress, "1742. * Wl ' 1 1inrn Collins (1721-^0). Born, Chichester. Educated at Winches- ter and at Magdalen College, Oxford. Scholarly. Friend of Thom- son and Joseph and Thomas Warton. Mental decline began, 1749. Be- came insane in 1754. a. Persian Eclogues (1742). b. Odes on Several Subjects (1746). c. Ode on the Death of Thomson (1748). d. Ode on the Popular Superstitions of the Scottish Highlands (1788). OUTLINE XLVI The Revival of the Past I. THOMAS GRAY (i7i6-i77iV 1. Life. Born Cornhill, London. Eton, 1727. Peterhouse Cambridge, 1734-38. Continent, with Walpole, 1739-41. Stoke Poges, 1741- 2. Life spent chiefly in study at Cambridge, Peterhouse, 1742 - 56, Pembroke Hall, 1756-71. L.L.B., ^744. Refused Laureateship, 1757. Appointed Professor of Modern History, 1768. Numerous tours including Scotland, Wales, English Lakes, and the Wye, 1762-70. 2. Publications. a. Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College (1747). b. Ode on the Spring (1748). c. Elegy in a Country Churchyard (1751). d. Six Poems by T. Gray (1753). e. Pindaric Odes (1757). f. Poems (1768). g. Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Gray, with his Poems (Mason; 1775). II. HORACE WALPOLE (1717-1797). Son of Sir Robert Walpole. Compan- ion of Gray at Eton and Oxford and on his early travels. Made his house at Strawberry Hill, ' a little Gothic castle/ 1747. Published The Castle of Otranto, 1764; The Mysterious Mother, 1768. Earl of Oxford, 1791. III. RICHARD HURD (1720-1808). Fellow of Emmanuel College, Cambridge. Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry, 1774; of Worcester, 1781. Letters on Chivalry and Romance, 1762. IV. THOMAS WARTON (1728-90). Entered Trinity College, Oxford, 1744. Fellow, 1751-90. Professor of Poetry, 1757-67. Enthusiastic antiqua- rian and editor. Wrote and published considerable verse. Observations on Spenser's Faery Queen, 1754. History of English Poetry, 1774-81. Helped expose Chatterton forgeries, 1782. Poet-laureate, 1785-90. V. THOMAS PERCY f 1720-181 iV M.A., Christ Church, Oxford, 1753. Bishop of JJromore, 1782. Edited Reliques of Ancient English Poetry, 1765. (See Outline XIII.) Northern Antiquities, 1770. VI. JAMES MACPHERSON (1736-96). Scotchman. Educated at Aberdeen and Edinburgh. Published Fragments of Ancient Poetry collected in the Highlands, 1760; Fin gal t 1762; Temora, 1763; all alleged translations from the Gaelic of Ossian. VII. THOMAS CHATTERTON (1752-1770). Born and lived at Bristol. First verses, 1762. First publications, 1763. Pretended to have discovered poems of Thomas Rowley among documents of St. Mary Redcliffe Church, 1765. Went to London, 1770. Poisoned himself with arsenic, 1770. Editions of ' Rowley ' poems, 1777 and 1782, included Bristowe Tragedie; JElla, a Tragycal Enterlude; Goddwyn, a Tragedie; Balade of Charitie; Battle of Hastings. OUTLINE XLVII The Progress of Naturalism I. WILLIAM CQWPKR (1731-1800). 1. Life. Born, Great Berkhampstead. Suffered from brutal jtreatmen at private school, 1737-8. Attended Westminster School, 1741-4$ Articled to a London solicitor, 1750-52. First signs of melancholia Called to the bar, 1754. Violently insane; 1763-5. Entered Unwii family, 1765. Occupied with parochial work and devotions. Re moved with Mrs. Unwin to Olney, 1767. Second attack of insanity 1773. Began literary work, 1777-80. Friendship with Lady "Auster Ended through Mrs. Unwin's jealousy, 1784. Third attack of insan ity, 1787. Never wholly recovered: 2. Publications. a. Poems. Olney Hymns (with Newton, 1779). Table Talk (1782). ^ The Task (and other poems, 1785) Translation of Homer (1791). b. Letters (1824). II. GEORGE CRA^E (1754-1832). 1. Life: Sorn, Aldborough, Suffolk. Largely self-educated. Studie medicine, surgery, botany. Practised surgery until 1780. Tried lit erary work in London. On Burke's advice went into holy orden Held various livings, and was never again in want. 2. Poems: The Candidate (1780) ; The Village (1783) ; The Newspape (1785) ; The Parish Register (1807) ; The Borough (1810) ; Tales i Verse (1812) ; Talcs of the Hall (1819). III. WILLIAM BLAKE (1757-1827). 1. Lite. London. Began study of drawing, 1767. Apprenticed t James Basire, an engraver, 1771-78. First exhibited at Royal Acad emy, 1780. Literary period, 1783-1804. Engravings for Young' Night Thoughts, 1797. Residence at Felpham, 1800-03. Engraving for Hayley's Life of Cowper, 1803. Tried for sedition, 1804. De signs for Blair's The Grave, 1808. The Canterbury Pilgrims, 181; ' Inventions ' to the Book of Job, 1825. Designs to Dante, 1824-27. 2. Examples of Literary Work. (All of these, except the first, were en graved upon plates and embellished with designs by himself.) a. Poems. Poetical Sketches (1783). Songs of Innocence (1789). Songs of Experience (1794). b. Prophetic Books: The Book of Thel (1789); The Marriage o Heaven and Hell (1790) ; America, A Prophecy (1793) ; Jerusalem (1804); Milton (1804), OUTLINE XLVIII Robert Burns I. LIFE. Born near Kirk Alloway, Ayrshire, 1759. Educated by his_ father. Youth spent in labor on various Ayrshire farms. Mount OlipEant, 1766- 77. Lochlea, 1777-84. Tried flax-dressing at Irvine, 1781. His habits became convivial and lawless and his opinions unorthodox. Father died, 1784. With his brother Gilbert, managed Mossgiel farm, 1784-86. Re- solved to leave Scotland for Jamaica.' To defray passage published first edition of Poems, 1786. Success led him to remain and bring out a second edition. Edinburgh, winters of 1786-87 and 1787-88. Highland tour, summer of 1786. Realized five hundred pounds for copyright of his poems. Married Jean Armour and took farm at Ellisland, near Dumfries, 1788. Took post in the excise, 1789. Gave up farm and removed to Dumfries, 1791. Health and reputation injured by loose habits. Nearly lost position in excise because of revolutionary sympathies. II. CHIEF PUBLICATIONS. Y^i. Poems, chiefly in the Scottish Dialect (Kilmarnock, 1786). Among the poems in this edition are : The Two, Dogs. Scotch Drink. The Holy Fair. Address to the Deil. Poor Mailie. Hallowe'en. The Cotter's Saturday Night. To a Mouse. To a Mountain Daisy. Man was Made to Mourn. Several of the Epistles. Songs (only three or four). 2. The Same. Second (first Edinburgh) Edition (1787). Poems added in this edition were: Death and Doctor Hornbook, The Brigs of Ayr, A Winter Night, Address to the Unco Guid, To a Haggis, John Barleycorn, My Name, O, Green Grow the Rashes, 0, etc. 3. The Same. London (1787). 4. A two volume edition (Edinburgh and London, 1793). Among twenty new pieces were Tarn O'Shanter and On Seeing a Wounded Hare. 5. 184 Songs in The Scots Musical Museum (1787-1803). . 6. The Jolly Beggars and other suppressed poems (Glasgow, 1799). 7. Songs in Select Collection of Original Scottish Airs (1801-02). OUTLINE XLIX William Wordsworth I. LIFE. Born, Cockermouth, Cumberland, 1770. Hawkshead Gramm School. B.A. St. John's College, Cambridge, 1791. Traveled in Franc 1791-92. Settled with his sister Dorothy at Racedown, Dorsetshire, 175 Intimacy with Coleridge, 1797. Same year, removed to Alfoxden. Ge many, 1798-99. Settled in the Lake Country, Dove Cottage, Townen Grasmere, 1799. Marriage, 1802. Rydal Mount, Windermere, 181 Distributor of stamps for Westmoreland, 1813. Pensioned, 1842. PC Laureate, 1843. Died, 1850. II. CHIEF PUBLICATIONS. 1. Descriptive Sketches (1792). 2. Lyrical Ballads (with Coleridge, 1798). 3. Poems (1807). 4. The Excursion (1814). 5. Collected Edition (6 vols.), 1836. 6. The Prelude (posthumous, 1850). 7. The Recluse (posthumous, 1888). III. CLASSIFIED EXAMPLES OF WORDSWORTH'S POETRY. (The dates are the of composition.) 1. Meditative and Didactic Poems. a. Tintern Abbey (1798). b. Portions of Wordsworth's projected masterpiece. The Prelude (1799-1805). The Recluse (fragment, 1805). The Excursion (1813). 2. Pastorals. a. Michael (1800). b. The Ruined Cottage (1796?. Incorporated into The Excursion). 3. Odes. \ a. Intimations of Immortality (1803-06). b. Ode to Ditty (1805). 4. Characteristic Lyrics and Ballads. * a. W 'e are Seven (1798). b. The Solitary Reaper (1803). c. Yarrow Unvisited (1803). -d. / wandered lonely as a cloud (1804). e. To a Cuckoo (1804). f. The Primrose of the Rock (1831). 5. Classical Studies. a. Laodamia (1814)* b. Dion (1814). 6. Sonnets. a. Personal and occasional. b. Political and patriotic. IV. WORDSWORTH'S THEORY OF POETRY. Fully stated in his preface to Lyric Ballads (2nd ed., 1800). OUTLINE L Samuel Taylor Coleridge I. LIFE. Born, 1772, Ottery St. Mary, Devonshire. Christ's Hospital, 1782-90. Enter Jesus College, Cambridge, 1791. London, i793-_ Four months with Fifteenth Light Dragoons, 1793-94. Met Southey at Oxford, 1794. Pantisocracy. Married Sara Fricker, Bristol, 1795. First volume of poems, Bristol, 1796. Lecturing. The Watchman. Nether Stowey and Wordsworth, 1797. Chief poetic period, 1797-1802. Ger- many, 1798-99. The Morning Post. Greta Hall, Keswick, 1800. The Kendal Black Drop, 1801. Malta, 1804-06. Opium in the ascendant, 1806-16. Found asylum with James Gillman, Highgate, 1816. Death, 1834- II. POETRY. Classified Examples. (The dates are those of composition.) 1. Poems, supernatural or mystical. a. The Ancient Mariner (1797). b. Christabel (1797, 1800). c. Kubla Khan (1797). 2. Meditative Poems. a. In Blank Verse. Religions Musings (1794). Frost at Midnight (1798). b. Confessional Pieces. Dejection, an Ode (1802). To William Wordsworth (1806?). c. Political. Ode to the Departing Year (1796). France, an Ode (1798). d. Sonnets (chiefly early). 3. Love Poems. a. Love (1797-98). b. Lewti, or the Circassian Love-Chant (1797-98). 4. Dramas. \ a. The Fall of Robespierre (with Southey, 1794). \ b. Wallenstein (translated from Schiller, 1800). \ c. Remorse (acted, 1813). d. Zapolya (published, 1817). III. PROSE. (Dates are those of publication.) 1. Journalism. a. The Watchman (1796). b. The Friend (1809-10). c. The Morning Post (articles, 1799-1800). d. The Courier (articles, 1811-12). 2. Lay Sermons. Political and Religious. a. The Statesman's Manual (1816). b. Aids to Reflection (1825). 3. Literary Criticism. ^ra. Biographia Literaria (1817). N^b. Shakspere, etc. (lectures, 1807-08, 1811-12, 1818). 4. Prose Fantasy. The Wanderings of Cain (written, 1798) 101 OUTLINE LI Scott and Romantic Fiction I. FORERUNNERS. 1. Horace Walpole (1717-1797), The Castle of Otranto (1764). 2. Clara Reeve (1725-1803), The Old English Baron (1777). 3. Anne Radcliffe (1764-1823), The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794). 4. 'Monk' Lewis (1775-1818), Ambrosius, or The Monk (1795). II. SIR WALTER SCOTT. 1. Life. Born, Edinburgh, JL^JU,. Educated at the High School and Col- lege. Called to the bar, 1792. Contributed to Lewis's Tales of Terror, 1799. Published Border Minstrelsy, 1802. Sheriff of Selkirkshire, 1804. Moved to Ashestiel. Removed to Abbotsford, 1814. Period of poetical activity, 1805-13. First novel, Waverley, 1814. Created baronet, 1820. Failure of the Ballantynes, 1826. Death, 1832. 2. Translations, Critical and Antiquarian Works : Translation of Goethe's -Goetz von Berlichingen (1799) {^Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border (1802) ; Edition of Dryden (1808) ; Edition of Swift (1814) ; Life of Napoleon (1827). y 3. Poems: -T\e Lay of the Last Minstrel (1805) ; Marmion (1808) ',The Lady of the Lake (1810) ; Don Roderick (1811) ; The Bridal of Trier- wain (1813) ; Rokeby (1813) ; The Lord of the Isles (1815) ; Harold, the Dauntless (1817). 4. Novels in Order of Publication, with Period of the Action. /'Waverley ........................ i3i4, period of George II. Guy Mannering .................. 1^15, George II and III. The Antiquary ................... 1816, George III. The Black Dwarf ................. 1816, Anne. Old Mortality .................... 1816, Charles II and after. ..-Rob Roy ........... . ............ 1818, George I. '/The Heart of Midlothian .......... 1818, George II. ,,-^The Brife of Lammermoor ........ 1819, William III. A Legend of Montrose ............ 1819, Charles I. Ivanhoe ......................... 1820, Richard I. The Monastery ......... . ........ 1820, Elizabeth. The Abbot ............. .......... 1820, Elizabeth. Kenilworth ...................... 1821, Elizabeth. The Pirate ...... . ............... 1822, (c) William III. The Fortunes of Nigel ............ 1822, James I. Peveril of the Peak ......... ..... 1823, Charles II. Quentin Durward ................. 1823, Edward IV. St. Ronan's Well ................. 1824, George III. Red gauntlet ........... ........... 1824, Early George III. The Betrothed ................... 1825, Henry II. ^The Talisman ............. ...... ^25, Richard I. Woodstock ................... .... 1826, Commonwealth. The Two Drovers ................ 1827, Early George III. The Highland Widow ............ 1827, George II. The Surgeon's Daughter .......... 1827, George II and III. The Fair Maid of Perth ............ 1828, Henry IV. Anne of Geierstein ............... 1829, Edward IV. Count Robert of Paris ............ 1831, William Rufus. Castle Dangerous ................ 1831, Edward I. 103 OUTLINE LII Lord Byron I. LIFE. George Noel Gordon, fifth Lord Byron of Newstead, born, 1788, Holies Street, London. Succeeded to peerage when ten years of age. Inherited pride and sensitiveness were aggravated in boyhood -by ill dis- cipline on the part of his mother, and by lameness and poverty. Harrow School. Trinity College, Cambridge, 1805-08. Traveled in Spain, Greece, and the Levant, 1809-11. Married, 1815. Public indignation at his separation a year later induced him to leave England permanently. In Switzerland, met and associated with Shelley, who was also an exile. Italy, 1816-23. Venice, 1816-19. Ravenna, 1819-21, Pisa, 1821-22. Countess Teresa Guiccioli, 1819. Renewed intimacy with Shelley, iSio/- 22. Organized military expedition to Greece, 1823. Died of fever at Missolonghi, April 19, 1824. II. CHIEF POEMS CLASSIFIED BY PERIODS. 1. Juvenile Period (1807-12). a. Hours of Idleness (1807). 'b. English Bards and Scotch Reviewers (1809). c. Childe Harold (Cantos I and II, 1812). 2. Period of Metrical Romances (1813-16). a. The Giaour (May, 1813). b. The Bride of Abydos (*Dec., 1813). c. The Corsair (Jan., 1814). d. Lara (Aug., 1814). e. Hebrew Melodies (1815). f. The Siege of Corinth (Jan., 1816). g. Parisina (Jan., 1816). 3. Mature Romantic Period (1816-18). /a. Childe Harold (Canto III, 1816; Canto IV, 1818). v b. The Prisoner of Chillon (1816). c. The Dream (1816). d. Stanzas to Augusta (1816). e. Manfred (1817). f. Lament for Tasso (1817"). Satiric and Dramatic Period (1819-23). a. Serio-comic narrative. Bcppo (i8i7>f Do;* Juan (1819; 1821-23); The Island (1822). b. Satire. The Vision of Judgment (1821). The Age of Bronze (1822). c. Tragic drama. Marino Faliero (1820); Sardanapalus (1821); The Two Foscarl (1821); The Deformed Transformed (1821). d. Mysteries. Heaven and Earth (1821) ; Cain (1822). III. PROSE. 1. Letters and Journals. 2. Controversial Papers. 105 OUTLINE LIII Percy Bysshe Shelley I. LIFE. Born, Field Place, Sussex, 1792. Eton, 1804-10. Entered Uni- versity College, Oxford, April, 1810. Expelled, March, i8iL jvtarried to Harriet Westbrook, at Edinburgh, August, same year. Met Southey. Opened correspondence with William Godwin. Brief visit to Ireland,, Wales, 1812-13. Estrangement from Harriet. Separation, May, 1814. Flight to France, with Mary Godwin, July, same year. With Byron in Switzerland, 1816. Suicide of Harriet, 1816. Harriet's children removed from his authority by judgment in Chancery, 1817. Final farewell to England, 1818. Italy, 1818-22. Naples and Venice, 1818-19; Rome, 1819-20; Pisa, 1820-22. Drowned in the Bay of Lerici, July 8, 1822. II. CLASSIFIED EXAMPLES OF SHELLEY'S POETRY. (The dates are those of composition.) 1. Early Poems (1813-17). a. Queen Mab (1813). b. Alastor (1815). c. The Revolt of Islam (1817). 2. Lyrical Dramas of Philosophical Intent. a. Prometheus Unbound (1819). b. Hellas (1821). 3. Drama. a. The Cenci (1819). b. Charles the First (1822), fragment. 4. Satire. a. Peter Bell the Third (1819). b. Swellfoot the Tyrant (1820). 5. Lyrics. Hymn to Intellectual Beauty (1816) ; Ode to the West Wind (1819); Ode to Liberty (1820); The Sensitive Plant (1820); The Cloud (1820) ; To a Skylark (1820) ; To Night (1821) ; Triumph of Life (1822), unfinished. 6. Poems Inspired by Persons. a. Julian and Maddalo (1818, Byron). b. Letter to Maria Gisborne (1820). r F'T'tTrrfriV/fdffr (Tfl7T, Fmilia Viviani)- , d. Adpnais (1821, Keats). e. With a Guitar , to Jane (1822, Mrs. Williams). III. PROSE. (The dates are those of publication). 1. Romances. a. Zastrozzi (1810). b. St. Irvyne; or the Rosicrucian (1811). 2. Tracts. a. An Address to the Irish People (1812). b. A Refutation of Deism (1814). 3. Essays. A Defense of Poesy (1840). 4. Letters (1840, 1845, I ^5O, etc.). 107 OUTLINE LIV John Keats I. LIFE. Born, London, 1795, at the Swan arid Hoop stables in Moorfields Attended a good school at Enfield and became intimate with Charles Cow den Clarke, son of the master. Apprenticed to a surgeon, 1810 ~ Studiec surgery in London hospitals, 1814-17. Performed a few operations anc abandoned surgery for literature. First appearance in print a sonnet ir Leigh Hunt's Examiner, May, 1816. Through Hunt met Shelley, Haydoi the painter, and later, Wordsworth. Settled, 1817, with his brothers ir Hampstead. Health began to fail. Made numerous short tours. Nursec his brother Tom through last illness, autumn of 1818. Engagement t( Fanny Brawne, 1819. Suffered first hemorrhage, Feb. 3, 1820. Sailec with Joseph Severn for Italy, September, 1820. Died, Rome, Feb. 23, 1821 aged 25 years, 4 months. II. CHIEF POEMS. 1. Poems by John Keats (1817). Shelley assisted in preparing this vol ume for the press. Among the contents were Imitation of Spenser (w 1812 or 1813) ; Sleep and Poetry (pronounced by Hunt the best poem ii the volume) ; On first looking into Chapman's Homer (w. 1815; printec in Hunt's Examiner, Dec., 1816). 2. Endymion (1818). Written summer of 1817. Sneeringly reviewed in Black wood's Maga- zine and Quarterly Review. 3. Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems (1820) Praised in Edinburgh Review. Besides pieces named in the title contained : ^ Ode to a Nightingale. - Ode on a Grecian Urn. Ode to Psyche. Fancy. Ode ('Bards of passion'). Lines on the Mermaid Tavern. Robin Hood. To Autumn. Ode on Melancholy. Hyperion. 4. Posthumous and Fugitive Poems. a. On Seeing the Elgin Marbles (w. 1817). b. Stanzas ('In a drear-nighted December'; w. 1818). c. La Belle Dame Sans Merci (w. 1819). d.. Last Poem^ (^Bright-Star, would I were stgadfastjia^thou art ' ; w * Sept. 71820) iog OUTLINE LV Southey and Landor I. ROBERT SOUTHEY. 1. Life. Born, Bristol, 1774. Early given to reading an ^-Andrea del Sarto, The+Bishop Orders his Tomb, Bishop Blougram's Apology, etc. d. Dramatis Persona ('1864'). Included James Lee's Wife, Abt Vogler, sRabbi ben Ezra, Mr. Sludge the Medium, A Death in the Desert, Caliban upon Setebos, etc. e. Pacchiarotto and Other Poems (1876). f. Dramatic Idylls (1879 and 1880). g. Jocoseria (1883). h. Ferishtah's Fancies (1884). i. Parleyings with Certain People of Importance in Their Day (1887). . Asolando RelTgious^Poems: Christmas Eve and Easter Day (1850) ; La Saisiaz (1878). 5. Novelistic Poems and Extended Monologues. a. The Ring and the Book (1868-60). An Italian murder case retold from twelve poTnts~"oF view. b. Prince Hohenstiel-Schivangau (1871). c. Fifine at the Fair (1872). d. Red Cotton Night Cap Country (1873). e. The Inn Album (1875). 6. Adaptations from the Greek. a. Balaustion's Adventure, including a Transcript from Euripides ' (1871). b. Aristophanes' Apology, including a Transcript from Euripides, Being The Last Adventure of Balaustion (1875). c. Agamemnon (translation from ^Eschylus, 1877). 123 OUTLINE LXII Early Nineteenth Century Novel (exclusive of Scott) I. THE NOVEL, the dominant form of literature in the nineteenth century surpasses other forms in abundance, and at least equals them in originalit) and significance. With the exception of Scott (Outline Limits prevail- ing tone was realistic rather than romantic, and it treated contemporary events rather than those of the distant past. ,11. JANE AUSTEN (1775-1817). 1. Life. Youngest of seven children. Excellently educated in youth Lived a placid life in increasing ill-health at Bath and Southampton She invests the commonplace details of domestic life with the charn of an easy humor. 2. Novels. a. Sense and Sensibility (1811). b. Pride and Prejudice (1813). c. Mansfield Park (1814). d. Emma (1816). e. Northanger Abbey (written, 1798; pub., 1817). f. Persuasion (1818). III. CHARLES DICKENS (1812-1870). 1. Life. Early life spent in poverty. His own youthful story closel) suggested in David Copperfield. Achieved success in fiction at age o: 24. The most popular English novelist. The zeal of the social re former combined with abounding humor and sentiment. 2. Novels. a. Oliver Twist (1837-38). b. Nicholas Nickleby (1838-39). c. Barnaby Rudge (1841). d. Dombey and Son (1846-48). e. David Copperfield (1849-50). f. Bleak House (1852-53). g. A Tale of Two Cities (1859). IV. WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY (1811-1863). 1. Life. Born in India; educated at Cambridge. Studied drawing anc law. For many years a random contributor to Eraser's and Punch Reputation established upon publication of Vanity Fair. A keen ob- server and sympathetic though satirical interpreter. 2. Novels. a. Barry Lyndon (1844). -'b. Vanity Fair (1847-48). c. Pendennis (1849-50). d. Henry Esmond (1852). e. The Newcomes (1854-55). V. OTHER SIGNIFICANT NOVELISTS. 1. Edward Bulwer-Lytton : Rienzi (1835). The Ca.rtons (1848-9). 2. Benjamin Disraeli: Coningsby (1844). 3. Charlotte Bronte: Lme_Eyre (1847). 4. Emily Bronte: Wuthenng Heights (1847). 5. Elizabeth Gaskell: Mary Barton (1848); Cranford (1853). 6. Charles Kingsley: Alton Locke (1849) ; Westward JIo (1855). 125 >s OUTLINE LXIII Later Nineteenth Century Novel I. THE NOVEL AT THE END OF THE CENTURY was marked by an almost coi plete subsidence of the romantic impulse, and by an emphasis of ethic psychological, and social problems. II. GEORGE ELIOT (pen name for Mary Ann Evans), 1. L' : fe. Born, 1819. The inaugurator of a new movement in Engli Novel. Early youth reflected in Adam Bede and The Mill on t Floss. First interests were in German philosophy and theology. A sistant editor of the Westminster Magazine. She portrays the inn lives of thoughtful people. Died, 1874. 2. Novels. a. Adam Bede (1859). b. The Mill on the Floss (1860). c. Silas Marncr (1861). d. Romola (1863). e. Felix Holt, the Radical (1866). f. Middlemarch ( 187 1-2) . g. Daniel Deronda (1876). III. ANTHONY TROLLOPE (1815-1882). Through life had a post in Briti Post-Office. Wrote about fifty novels, of which the best are the Be Chester series. His art displays health, shrewdness, and extraordina mechanical knack. Representative novels. The Warden (1855); Be Chester Towers (1857) ; Framley Parsonage (1861) ; The Last Chroni( of Bar set (1867). IV. ROBERT Louis STEVENSON ( 1850-1894) . An indefatigable student of 1 erary models, and the best representative of the free romantic methc Chief novels: Treasure Island (1883) ; Kidnapped (1886) ; The Mast of Ballantrae (1889). V. GEORGE MEREDITH (1828-1909). The exponent of the comic spirit as theory of art. Chief novels: The Ordeal of Richard Feverel (1859 The Adventures of Harry Richmond (1871); Beauchamp's Care (1875); The Egoist (1879); Diana of the Crossways (1885); T, Amazing Marriage (1895). ^\,% VI. THOMAS HARDY (born, 1840)' The portrayer of Wessex peasant li: A Pair of Blue Eyes (1873) ; Far from the Madding Crowd (1874 The Return of the Native (1878) ; Te&s of the Durbervttles (1891) ; /M the Obscure (1895). VII. OTHER NOVELISTS are Charles Reade (1814-1884), Henry James (184 . ) t William Dean Howells (1837 ). Among short story writers a Bret Harte (1839-1902) and Rudyard Kipling (1865 ). OUTLINE LXIV John Ruskin I. LIFE. Born, London, 1819, of Scotch parents. Extraordinarily prec clous. Wrote poetry at seven; began publishing articles, at fiftee Early study various and enthusiastic, but desultory. Christ-Church, O ford, 1837. Won Newdigate Prize. B.A., 1842. Traveled much in t Alps and Italy, studying nature and art. Chief residences, Herne Hi 1823-43; Denmark Hill, 1843-72; Brantwood, 1872-1900. Married, i& First appearance as lecturer, Edinburgh, 1853. Took charge of drawi: classes at Working Men's College, 1854-58. Inherited from his fath< 1864, JS/J 000 pounds, practically all of which was eventually spent gifts and social experiments. Helped found St. George's Company, 18; Slade professor of Art at Oxford, 1870-79, and 1883-4, publishing eig volumes of lectures. Attacks of brain fever in and after 1878. Aft 1879, lived in retirement at Brantwood, in the English Lake Counti Died, January, 1900. II. WORKS. 1. Primarily /Esthetic. a. Modern Painters, Vol. I (1843) ; Vol. II (1846) ; Vols. Ill and 1 (1856); Vol. V (1860). .-b. Seven Lamps of Architecture (1849): Sacrifice, Truth, Pow< Beauty, Life, Memory, Obedience. c. Pre-Raphaelitism (1851). d. $tonesj>f Venice. Vol. I (1851) ; Vols. II and III (1853). Vol. ] Chap. 6, On the Nature of Gothic, reprinted by Furnivall for t Working Men's College (1854) ; reprinted by William Morris (1892 2. Primarily Ethical. a. Notes on the Construction of Sheep folds (1851). b. Lectures on the Political Economy of Art (1857). c. Four essays on the first principles of Political Economy (Cornh Magazine, 1860) ; reprinted as Unto this Last (1862). d. Essays in Political Economy (Fraser's Magazine, 1862-3) ; reprint as Munera Pulvcris. .-e. Sesame and Lilies (1865). Collected lectures, f. Ethics of the Dust (1866). Collected lectures. ,g. Crown of Wild Olive (1866). Collected lectures, h. Time and Tide by Weare and Tyne (1867) ; twenty-five letters newspapers. ^ i. Fors Clavigera (1871-78). A series of monthly letters * to the wor men and laborers of Great Britain'; contains much autobiograpr. material. Chiefly a statement of Raskin's dreams of social rec ganization. 3. Autobiographical. Praeterita (begun, 1885). 129 OUTLINE LXV Matthew Arnold I. LIFE. Eldest son of Dr. Thomas Arnold, famous headmaster of Rug' Born, Laleham, near Staines, 1822. Rugby, 1837-41. Gained a schol ship at Bglliol College, Oxford. Won Newdigate prize, 1843. Fellow Oriel College, 1845. Private Secretary to Marquis of Lansdowne, 18 Became Inspector of Schools, 1851, and married. Professor of Poetry Oxtord, 1857-67. Lectured in America, 1883-4 and 1886. Died at Liv pool, 1888. II. WORKS. 1. Poems. a. The Strayed Reveller and Other Poems (1849). b. Empedocles on Etna and Other Poems (1852). c. Poems (1853). Included Sohrab and Rustum, and The Schot Gipsy. d> M'erope (1858). e. New Poems (1867). Included Thyrsis and A Southern Night. f. Poems (1869). Collective edition, first to include Rugby Chap Re-issued with slight additions (1877; 1885). 2. Prose. a. Literary Criticism. On Translating Homer (1861). Essays in Criticism (First Series, 1865). Included The Function Criticism at the Present Time; The Literary Influence of Academic Heine; Joubert; Marcus Aurelius; Pagan and Medieval Religio Sentiment, etc The Study of Celtic Literature (1867). Essays in Criticism (Second Series, 1888). Included The Study Poetry; Milton; Gray; Keats; Wordsworth; Byron; Shelley; Tolsh Ami el. b. Criticism of Intellectual and Social Conditions. Schools and Universities on the Continent (1868). ^^ Culture and Anarchy (1869). Friendship's Garland ( 1871 ) . Mixed Essays (1879). Literary essays, in part. Irish Essays (1882). Discourses in America (1885). c. Theological Criticism. St. 'Paul and Protestantism (1870). . Literature and Dogma (1873). God and the Bible (1875). Last Essays on Church and Religion (1877). 131 OUTLINE LXVI Rossetti and Morris I. DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI. 1. Life. Born, London, 1828; son of a scholar and poet. Began original writing at age of six. Educated at King's College, London. -Studied drawing and painting. After having done considerable literary work, joined Ford Madox Brown, Holman Hunt, Millais, and others in forming the Pre-Raphaelite school of painting. Financial aid from Ruskin. Met Edward Burne-Jones, Swinburne, and William Morris. Wrote and painted prolifically. Formed chloral habit. Died, London, 1882. Unique in ob- taining equal celebrity as poet and as painter. 2. Chief publications. a. Early Italian Poets (1861), reprinted as Dante and his Circle (1874). Translations of sonnets and of other short poems by Dante, Guido Cavalcanti, Cino da Pistoia, and others. b. Poems (1870). Contains: (i) such poems as The Blessed Dampzel, Staff and Scrip, The Portrait, A Last Confession; (2) numerous sonnets, many of which were later incorporated into The House of Life (1881). c. Ballads and Sonnets (1881). Contains: (i) ballads, Rose Mary, The White Ship, The Kings Tragedy; (2) lyrics, Soothsay, Chimes, Parted Presence, Possession; (3) sonnets. d. Hand and Soul. Published in The Germ, 1850. The only imagina- tive work in prose that Rossetti completed. II. WILLIAM MORRIS 1. Life. Born near London, 1834. Educated at Marlborough School and Exeter College, Oxford. Wide reading. Enthusiasm for Carlyle, Rus- kin, and Kingsley. 1854-55, two visits to France. Worked at architec- ture and painting. With Rossetti, Burne-Jones, and others, established (1861) a firm for designing and manufacturing furniture and household decorations. 1890, founded Kelmscott Press, at Hammersmith. Wrote voluminously. 1885, became an active socialist, delivering lectures and contributing to The Commonweal Died, 1896. 2. Works. a. Chief original poetical works. Sir Galahad, a Christmas Mystery (1858). The Defence of Guenevere, and Other Poems (1858). The Life and Death of Jason (1867). The Earthly Paradise (1868-70). Love is Enough (1872). Sigurd the Volsung and the Fall of the Niblungs (1876). b. Romances: in prose, or in prose and verse. A Dream of John Ball and a King's Lesson (1888). A Tale of the House of the Wolfings (1889). The Roots of the Mountains (1890). The Story of the Glittering Plain (1891). News from Nowhere (1891). The Well at the World's End (1896). c. Translations. Grettis Saga (1869) ; Vblsuuga Saga (1870) ; The JEneids of Virgil (1876) : The Odyssey of Homer 133 OUTLINE LXVII Algernon Charles Swinburne I. LIFE. Born, London, April, 1837 ; son of Admiral Charles Henry Swin- burne. Spent five years at Eton College. 1856-60, Bajlioj... College, Ox- ford. Lett without a degree. At the university distinguished Jiimself in Latin, Greek, French, and Italian;. contributed to Undergraduate Papers; began friendships with William Morris, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, and Edward Burne-jones. Traveled on Continent, visiting Landor in Flor- ence. Poems and Ballads (1866) aroused violent adverse criticism of moralists, to whom Swinburne replied in Notes on Poems and Reviews (1866). Lived quietly in London, writing vigorously. Intimate with Theodore Watts-Dunton, with whom he took up residence at Putney Hill, in 1879. After thirty years of retirement and voluminous writing here, he died, April 10, 1909. II. WORKS. T. Chief poetical publications. The Queen-Mother and Rosamond (1860); Atalanta in Calydon (1865); Chastelard: a Tragedy (1865); Poems and Ballads (1866); Songs before Sunrise (1871) ; Bothwell: a Tragedy (1874) ; Songs of Two Nations (1875) 5 Erechtheus (1876) ; Poems and Ballads. Sec- ond Series (1878) ; Studies in Song (1880) ; Songs of the Springtides (1880) ; Mary Stuart: a Tragedy (iSSi) ; Tristram of Lyonesse, and Other Poems (1882) ; A Century of Rondels (1883) ; Marino Faliero: a Tragedy (1885); Gathered Songs (1887); Locrine: a Tragedy (1887); Poems and Ballads. Third Series (1889); The Sisters: 'a Tragedy (1892); Astrophel and Other Poems (1894); The Tale of Balen (1896) ; Rosamund, Queen of the Lombards (1899) ; A Channel Passage, and Other Poems (1904) ; The Duke of Gandia (1908). 2. Critical Writings in Prose. William Blake: a Critical Essay (1868); George Chapman (1875); Essays and Studies (1875)'"; A Study of Shakespeare (1880) ; A Study of Victor Hugo (1886) ; Miscellanies (1886) ; A Study of Ben Jorison (1889) ; The Age of Shakespeare (1908). III. A CLASSIFICATION OF CHARACTERISTIC POEMS. 1. Tragedies on Greek Models. Atalanta in Calydon (1865) ; Erechtheus (1876). 2. Tragedies in the Elizabethan Manner. The Queen-Mother (1860); Rosamond (1860); Chastelard (1865); Bothwell (1874) ; Mary Stuart (1881) ; Marino Faliero (1885). 3. Medieval Studies. Masque of Queen Bersabe (1866); A Christmas Carol (1866); St. Dorothy (1866). 4. Classical and Hebrew Lyrical Themes. Ph&dra (1866); At Eleusis (1866); Hymn to Proserpine (1866): Hesperia (1866) ; Anactoria (1866) ; Aholibah (1866). 5. Odes. Athens: An Ode (1882) ; The Armada (1889). 6. Poems Dealing With Nature. Thalassius (1880); On the Cliffs (1880); The Garden of Cymodoce (1880). Narratives. Tristram of Lyonesse (1882) ; Tale of Balen (1896). Poems of Passion. Laus Veneris (1866); Faustine (1866). 135 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY BERKELEY Return to desk from which borrowed. This book is DUE on the last date stamped below. RV 120ct'49MB 2MB 195* LV1 REC'D LD MAY 88 JUN 8 1961 LD 21-100ro-9,'48(B399sl6)476 REC'D LD RU G 2 7 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY