A Brief History of English Literature
history of English literature is very vast and large. this article will briefly yet precisely cover the whole history of English Literature, so let's dive in.
1 OLD ENGLISH LITERATURE
The Old
English language or Anglo-Saxon is the earliest form of English. The period is
a long one and it is generally considered that Old English was spoken from
about A.D. 600 to about 1100. Many of the poems of the period are pagan, in
particular Widsith and Beowulf. The greatest English poem, Beowulf is the first
English epic. The author of Beowulf is anonymous. It is a story of a brave
young man Beowulf in 3182 lines. In this epic poem, Beowulf sails to
Denmark with a band of warriors to save the King of Denmark, Hrothgar.
Beowulf saves Danish King Hrothgar from a terrible monster called
Grendel. The mother of Grendel who sought vengeance for the death of her son
was also killed by Beowulf. Beowulf was rewarded and became King. After a
prosperous reign of some forty years, Beowulf slays a dragon but in the fight, he himself receives a mortal wound and dies. The poem concludes with the
funeral ceremonies in honor of the dead hero. Though the poem Beowulf is a little interesting to contemporary readers, it is a very important poem in the
Old English period because it gives an interesting picture of the life and
practices of the old days.
The difficulty encountered in reading Old English
Literature lies in the fact that the language is very different from that of
today. There was no rhyme in Old English poems. Instead, they used alliteration.
Besides Beowulf, there are many other Old English poems. Widsith, Genesis A,
Genesis B, Exodus, The Wanderer, The Seafarer, Wife’s Lament, Husband’s
Message, Christ and Satan, Daniel, Andreas, Guthlac, The Dream of the Rood, The
Battle of Maldon, etc. are some of the examples. Two important figures in Old
English poetry are Cynewulf and Caedmon. Cynewulf wrote religious poems and the
four poems, Juliana, The Fates of the Apostles, Christ, and Elene are always
credited to him. Caedmon is famous for his Hymn. Alfred enriched Old English
prose with his translations especially Bede’s Ecclesiastical History. Aelfric
is another important prose writer during the Old English period. He is famous for
his Grammar, Homilies, and Lives of the Saints. Aelfric’s prose is natural and
easy and is very often alliterative.
2 Middle
English Literature
Geoffrey Chaucer
Poet Geoffrey Chaucer was born circa 1340 in London, England. In 1357 he became a public servant to Countess Elizabeth of Ulster and continued in that capacity with the British court throughout his lifetime. The Canterbury Tales became his best-known and most acclaimed work. He died in 1400 and was the first to be buried in Westminster Abbey’s Poet’s Corner. Chaucer’s first major work was ‘The Book of the Duchess’, an elegy for the first wife of his patron John of Gaunt. Other works include ‘Parlement of Foules’, ‘The Legend of Good Women’ and ‘Troilus and Criseyde’. In 1387, he began his most famous work, ‘The Canterbury Tales', in which a diverse group of people recounts stories to pass the time on a pilgrimage to Canterbury.
William
Langland, (born c. 1330—died c. 1400), is presumed author of
one of the greatest examples of Middle English alliterative poetry,
generally known as Piers Plowman, an allegorical work with a complex
variety of religious themes. One of the major achievements of Piers
Plowman is that it translates the language and conceptions of the cloister
into symbols and images that could be understood by the layman. In general, the
language of the poem is simple and colloquial, but some of the author’s imagery
is powerful and direct.
Morality plays, Miracle plays, and Interlude
The morality play is an allegorical drama popular in Europe, especially during the 15th and
16th centuries, in which the characters personify moral qualities (such as
charity or vice) or abstractions (as death or youth) and in which moral lessons
are taught. Morality plays typically contain a protagonist who represents
either humanity as a whole or a smaller social structure. Supporting characters
are personifications of good and evil. This alignment of characters provides
the play’s audience with moral guidance. Morality plays are the result of the
dominant belief of the time period, that humans had a certain amount of control
over their post-death fate while they were on earth. An example is Everyman.
Miracle plays (mystery plays) were stories
taken from the Bible. Each play had four or five different scenes or acts. The
priests and monks were the actors. Each scene or act was performed at a
different place in town and the people moved from one stage to the next to
watch the play. The play usually ended outside the church so that the people
would go to church and hear a sermon after watching the play.
Another
kind of play, the Interlude was performed at court or at “great houses” by
professional minstrels or amateurs at intervals between some other
entertainment, such as a banquet, preceding or following a play, or between
acts. John Heywood, one of the most famous interlude writers, brought the genre
to perfection in his Four P-s
3 ELIZABETHAN POETRY AND PROSE
After the
death of Geoffrey Chaucer in 1400, a century has gone without great literary
outputs. This period is known as the Barren Age of literature. Even though there
are many differences in their work, Sir Thomas Wyatt and the Earl of Surrey are
often mentioned together. Sir Thomas Wyatt introduced the Sonnet in England
whereas Surrey wrote the first blank verse in English. Thomas Wyatt followed
the Italian poet Petrarch to compose sonnets. In this form, the 14 lines rhyme
abbaabba (8) + 2 or 3 rhymes in the last six lines. The Earl of Surrey’s blank
verse is remarkable. Christopher Marlow, Shakespeare, Milton, and many other
writers made use of it.
Tottel’s Songs and Sonnets (1557) is the first
printed anthology of English poetry. It contained 40 poems by Surrey and 96 by
Wyatt. There were 135 by other authors. Some of these poems were fine, some
childish.
In 1609, a
collection of Shakespeare’s 154 sonnets was printed. These sonnets were
addressed to one “Mr. W.H.”. The most probable explanation of the identity of
“W.H.” is that he was William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke. Other people mentioned
in the sonnets are a girl, a rival poet, and a dark-eyed beauty.
Shakespeare’s two long poems, Venus and Adonis, and The Rape of Lucrece are
notable.
One of the most important poets of the Elizabethan
period is Edmund Spenser (1552-1599). He has been addressed as “the poets’ poet”.
His pastoral poem, The Shepeard’s Calendar (1579) is in 12 books, one for each
month of the year. Spenser’s Amoretti, 88 Petrarchan sonnets celebrate his
progress in love. The joy of his marriage with Elizabeth Boyle is expressed in
his ode Epithalamion. His Prothalamion is written in honor of the double
marriage of the daughters of the Earl of Worcester. Spenser’s allegorical poem,
The Faerie Queene is his greatest achievement. Spenser invented a special
meter for The Faerie Queene. The verse has nine lines and the rhyme plan is
ababbcbcc. This verse is known as the ‘Spenserian Stanza’.
Sir Philip Sidney is remembered for his prose
romance, Arcadia. His critical essay Apology for Poetry and sonnet collection
Astrophel and Stella are elegant.
Michael Drayton and Sir Walter Raleigh are other
important poets of Elizabethan England. Famous Elizabethan dramatist Ben Jonson
produced fine poems also. The University Wits John Lyly, Thomas Kyd, George
Peele, Thomas Lodge, Robert Green, Christopher Marlow, and Thomas Nash also
wrote a good number of poems. John Lyly is most widely known as the author of
prose romance entitled Euphues. The style Lyly used in his Euphues is known as
Euphuism. The sentences are long and complicated. It is filled with tricks and
alliteration. A large number of similes are brought in.
John Donne’s works add to the beauty of Elizabethan
literature. He was the chief figure of Metaphysical Poetry. Donne’s poems are
noted for their originality and striking images and conceits. Satires, Songs and
Sonnets, Elegies, The Flea, A Valediction: forbidding mourning, A Valediction:
of weeping, etc. are his famous works.
Sir Francis Bacon is a versatile genius of
Elizabethan England. He is considered the father of English essays. His
Essays first appeared in 1597, the second edition in 1612, and the third edition
in 1625. Besides essays, he wrote The Advancement of Learning, New Atlantis, and
History of Henry VII. Bacon’s popular essays are Of Truth, Of Friendship, Of
Love, Of Travel, Of Parents and Children, Of Marriage and Single Life, Of
Anger, Of Revenge, Of Death, etc.
Ben
Jonson’s essays are compiled in The Timber or Discoveries. His essays are
aphoristic like those of Bacon. Jonson is considered the father of English
literary criticism. Many attempts were carried out to translate Bible into
English. After the death of John Wycliffe, William Tyndale tried on this
project. Coverdale carried on the work of Tyndale. The Authorized Version of the Bible was published in 1611.
4
ELIZABETHAN DRAMA
The English dramas have gone through a great
transformation during the Elizabethan period. The chief literary glory of the
Elizabethan age was its drama. The first regular English comedy was Ralph
Roister Doister written by Nicholas Udall. Another comedy Gammer Gurton’s
Needle is about the loss and the finding of a needle with which the old woman
Grammar Gurton mends clothes. The first English tragedy was Gorboduc, in blank
verse. The first three acts of Gorboduc were written by Thomas Norton and the other
two by Thomas Sackville.
The University Wits contributed hugely to the
growth of Elizabethan drama. The University Wits were young men associated with
Oxford and Cambridge. They were fond of heroic themes. The most notable figures
are Christopher Marlow, Thomas Kyd, Thomas Nash, Thomas Lodge, Robert Greene,
and George Peele.
Christopher Marlow was the greatest of the pre-Shakespearean dramatist. Marlow wrote only tragedies. His most famous works
are Edward II, Tamburlaine the Great, The Jew of Malta, The Massacre at
Paris, and Doctor Faustus. Marlow popularized the blank verse. Ben Jonson
called it “the mighty line of Marlow”.
Thomas Kyd’s The Spanish Tragedy is a Senecan
play. It resembles Shakespeare’s Hamlet. Its horrific plot gave the play great and lasting popularity.
The greatest literary figure of English, William
Shakespeare was born at Stratford-on-Avon on April 26, 1564. He did odd jobs
and left for London for a career. In London, he wrote plays for Lord
Chamberlain’s company. Shakespeare’s plays can be classified as the following
1. The Early Comedies: in these immature plays the
plots are not original. The characters are less finished and the style lacks
the genius of Shakespeare. They are full of wit and wordplay. Of this type is
The Comedy of Errors, Love’s Labour’s Lost, and The Two Gentlemen of Verona.
2. The
English Histories: These plays show a rapid maturing of Shakespeare’s
technique. His characterization has improved. The plays in this group are
Richard II, Henry IV, and Henry V.
3. The Mature Comedies: The jovial good humor of
Sir Toby Belch in Twelfth Night, the urban worldwide comedy of Touchstone in
As You Like It, and the comic scenes in The Merchant of Venice, Much Ado About
Nothing, etc. are full of vitality. They contain many comic situations.
4. The Sombre Plays: In this group are
All’s Well that Ends Well, Measure for Measure, and Troilus and Cressida. These
plays show a cynical attitude to life and are realistic in the plot.
5. The
Great Tragedies: Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth, and King Lear are the climax of
Shakespeare’s art. These plays stand supreme in the intensity of emotion, depth of
psychological insight, and power of style.
6. The
Roman Plays: Julius Caesar, Antony, Cleopatra, Coriolanus, etc. follow the
great tragic period. Unlike Marlow, Shakespeare is relaxed in the intensity of
tragedy.
7. The Last Plays: The notable last plays of
Shakespeare are Cymbeline, The Winter’s Tale, and The Tempest. The immense
power and variety of Shakespeare’s work have led to the idea that one man
cannot have written it all, yet it must be true that one man did. Thus
Shakespeare remains the greatest English dramatist even after four centuries
after his death.
Another
dramatist who flourished during the Elizabethan period is Ben Jonson. He
introduced the “comedy of humor’’, which portrays the individual as dominated
by one marked characteristic. He is best known for his Every Man in his
Humour. Other important plays by Jonson are Every Man out of His Humour,
Volpone or the Fox, and The Alchemist, John Webster’s The White Devil, and The
Duchess of Malfi are important Elizabethan dramas. Thomas Dekker, Thomas
Middleton, Thomas Heywood, Beaumont, and Fletcher, etc. are other noted
Elizabethan playwrights.
5 John Milton and His Time
John
Milton (1608- 1674) was born in London and educated at Christ’s College,
Cambridge. After leaving university, he studied at home. Milton was a great
poet, polemic, pamphleteer, theologian, and parliamentarian. In 1643, Milton
married a woman much younger than himself. She left Milton and did not return
for two years. This unfortunate incident led Milton to write two strong
pamphlets on divorce. The greatest of all his political writings is
Areopagitica, a notable and impassioned plea for the liberty of the press.
Milton’s
early poems include On Shakespeare, and On Arriving at the Age of Twenty-three.
L’Allegro(the happy man and Il Penseroso (the sad man) are two long narrative
poems. Comus is a masque written by Milton when he was at Cambridge. His
pastoral elegy Lycidas is on his friend, Edward King who drowned to death on a
voyage to Ireland. Milton’s one sonnet deals with the theme of his
blindness.
Milton is remembered for his greatest epic poem
Paradise Lost. Paradise Lost contained twelve books published in 1677. Milton
composed it in blank verse. Paradise Lost covers the rebellion of
Satan(Lucifer) in heaven and his expulsion. Paradise Lost contains hundreds of
remarkable lines. Milton coined many words in this poem. Paradise Regained and
Samson Agonistes are the other two major poems of Milton.
Milton occupies a central position in English
literature. He was a great Puritan and supported Oliver Cromwell in the Civil
War. He wrote many pamphlets in support of parliament. LYRIC POETS DURING
MILTON’S PERIOD (THE CAVALIER POETS) Milton’s period produced immense lyric
poetry. These lyrical poets dealt chiefly with love and war. Richard Lovelace’s
Lucasta contains the best of his shorter pieces. His best-known lyrics, such as
To Althea, from Prison, and To Lucasta, going in the Wars, are simple and
sincere.
Sir John Suckling was a famous wit at court. His
poems are generous and witty. His famous poem is Ballad upon a Wedding.
Robert Herrick wrote some fresh and passionate lyrics. Among his best-known, shorter poems are To Althea, To Julia, and Cherry Ripe. Philip Massinger and
John Ford produced some notable in this period. Many prose writers flourished
during Miltonof’s age. Sir Thomas Browne is the best prose writer of the
period. His ReligioMedici is a curious mixture of religious faith and
scientific skepticism. Pseudodoxia Epidemica or Vulgar Errors is another
important work. Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan, and Thomas Fuller’s The History of the
Holy War are other important prose works during this period. Izaac Walton’s
biography of John Donne is a very famous work of Milton’s period. His Compleat
Angler discusses the art of river fishing.
6 RESTORATION DRAMA AND PROSE
The
Restoration of Charles II (1660) brought about a revolution in English
literature. With the collapse of the Puritan Government there sprang up
activities that had been so long suppressed. The Restoration encouraged levity
in rules that often resulted in immoral and indecent plays.
John Dryden (1631-1700) Dryden is the greatest
literary figure of the Restoration. In his works, we have an excellent
reflection of both the good and the bad tendencies of the age in which he
lived. Before the Restoration, Dryden supported Oliver Cromwell. At the
Restoration, Dryden changed his views and became loyal to Charles II. His poem
Astrea Redux (1660) celebrated Charles II’s return. Dryden’s Annus
Mirabilis(Miracle Year) describes the terrors of the Great Fire in London in 1666.
Dryden appeared as the chief literary champion of the monarchy in his famous
satirical allegory, Absalom and Achitophel. John Dryden is now remembered for
his greatest mock-heroic poem, Mac Flecknoe. Mac Flecknoe is a personal attack
on his rival poet Thomas Shadwell. Dryden’s other important poems are Religio
Laici, and The Hind and the Panther. John Dryden popularized heroic couplets in
his dramas. Aurengaxebe, The Rival Ladies, The Conquest of Granada, Don
Sebastian, etc. are some of his famous plays. His dramatic masterpiece is All
for Love. Dryden polished the plot of Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopatra in his
All for Love. As a prose writer, Dryden’s work, An Essay on Dramatic Poesie is
worth mentioning. John Bunyan’s greatest allegory, The Pilgrim’s Progress, The
Holy War, and Comedy of Manners Restoration period produced a brilliant group
of dramatists who made this age immortal in the history of English literature.
These plays are hard and witty, comic and immoral.
It was George Etheredge who introduced Comedy of
Manners. His famous plays are She Would if She Could, The Man of Mode, and Love
in a Tub. William Congreve is the greatest of Restoration comedy writers. His
Love for Love, The Old Bachelor, The Way of the World, and The Double Dealer are
very popular. William Wycherley is another important Restoration comedy
playwright. His Country Wife, and Love in a Wood are notable plays. Sir John
Vanbrugh’s best three comedies are The Provoked Wife, The Relapse, and The
Confederacy.
7
ENGLISH POETS, 1660-1798
ALEXANDER POPE (1688-1744) Alexander Pope was the
undisputed master of both prose and verse. Pope wrote many poems and mock-epics
attacking his rival poets and the social condition of England. His Dunciad is an
attack on dullness. He wrote An Essay on Criticism (1711) in heroic couplets.
In 1712, Pope published The Rape of the Lock, one of the most brilliant
poems in the English language. It is a mock-heroic poem dealing with the fight between
two noble families. An Essay on Man, Of the Characters of Women, and the
translation of Illiad and Odyssey is his other major works. Oliver Goldsmith
wrote two popular poems in heroic couplets. They are The Traveller and The
Deserted Village.
James Thompson is remembered for his long series
of descriptive passages dealing with natural scenes in his poem The Seasons. He
wrote another important poem The Castle of Indolence.
Edward Young produced a large amount of literary
work of variable quality. The Last Day, The Love of Fame, and The Force of
Religion are some of them.
Robert Blair’s fame is chiefly dependent on his
poem The Grave. It is a long blank verse poem of meditation on man’s morality.
Thomas Gray (1716-1771) is one of the greatest
poets of English literature. His first poem was the Ode on a Distant Prospect
of Eton College. Then after years of revision, he published his famous Elegy
Written in a Country Churchyard. Its popularity had been maintained to the
present day. Other important poems of Thomas Gray are Ode on a Favourite Cat,
The Bard, and The Progress of Poesy.
William
Blake (1757-1827) is both a great poet and artist. His two collections of short
lyrics are Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience. His finest lyric is The
Tiger. Robert Burns is known as the national poet of Scotland. A Winter Night,
O My Love is Like a Red Red Rose, The Holy Fair, etc. are some of his major
poems. William Cowper, William Collins, and William Shenstone are other notable
poets before Romanticism.
8
EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY PROSE
DANIEL
DEFOE (1659-1731) Daniel Defoe wrote in bulk. His greatest work is the novel, Robinson Crusoe. It is based on an actual event that took place during his
time. Robinson Crusoe is considered to be one of the most popular novels in the English language. He started a journal named The Review. His A Journal of the
Plague Year deals with the Plague in London in 1665. Sir Richard Steele and
Joseph Addison worked together for many years. Richard Steele started the
periodicals The Tatler, The Spectator, The Guardian, The English Man, and The
Reader. Joseph Addison contributed to these periodicals and wrote columns. The
imaginary character of Sir Roger de Coverley was very popular during the
eighteenth century.
Jonathan
Swift (1667-1745) is one of the greatest satirists of English literature. His
first noteworthy book was The Battle of the Books. A Tale of a Tub is a
religious allegory like Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress. His longest and most
famous work is Gulliver’s Travels. Another important work of Jonathan Swift is
A Modest Proposal.
Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784) is very much
famous for his Dictionary (1755). The Vanity of Human Wishes is a longish poem
by him. Johnson started a paper named The Rambler. His The Lives of the Poets
introduces fifty-two poets including Donne, Dryden, Pope, Milton, and Gray.
Most of the information about Johnson is taken from his friend James Boswell’s
biography Life of Samuel Johnson. Edward Gibbon is famous for the great
historical work, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. His Autobiography
contains valuable material concerning his life. Edmund Burke is one of the
masters of English prose. He was a great orator also. His speech On American
Taxation is very famous. Revolution in France and A Letter to a Noble
Lord are his notable pamphlets. The letters of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, Earl
of Chesterfield, Thomas Gray, and Cowper are good prose works in Eighteenth-century literature. The Birth of the English Novel The English novel proper was
born in the middle of the eighteenth century.
Samuel Richardson (1689-1761) is considered the father of English novels. He published his first novel Pamela, or Virtue
Rewarded in 1740. This novel is written in the form of letters. Thus Pamela is
an ‘epistolary novel’. The character Pamela is a poor and virtuous woman who
marries a wicked man and afterward reforms her husband. Richardson’s next
novel Clarissa Harlowe was also constructed in the form of letters. Many
critics consider Clarissa as Richardson’s masterpiece. Clarissa is the
beautiful daughter of a severe father who wants her to marry against her will.
Clarissa is a very long novel.
Henry
Fielding (1707-1754) is another important novelist. He published Joseph Andrews
in 1742. Joseph Andrews laughs at Henry Fielding’s Pamela. His greatest novel
is Tom Jones. Henry Fielding’s last novel is Amelia. Tobias Smollett wrote a
‘picaresque novel’ titled The Adventures of Roderick Random. His other novels
are The Adventures of Ferdinand and Humphry Clinker. Laurence Sterne is now
remembered for his masterpiece Tristram Shandy which was published in 1760.
Another important work of Laurence Sterne is A Sentimental journey through
France and Italy. These novels are unique in English literature. Sterne blends
humor and pathos in his works. Horace Walpole is famous both as a letter
writer and novelist. His one and only novel The Castle of Otranto deals with
the horrific and supernatural theme. Other ‘terror novelists’ include William
Beckford and Mrs. Ann Radcliffe.
9 EARLY
NINETEENTH-CENTURY POETS (THE ROMANTICS)
The mainstream of poetry in the eighteenth century had been orderly and polished,
without much feeling for nature. The publication of the first edition of the
Lyrical Ballads in 1798 came as a shock. The publication of Lyrical Ballads by
William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge was the beginning of the
romantic age. They together with Southey are known as the Lake Poets because
they liked the Lake District in England and lived in it.
William Wordsworth ((1770-1850) was the poet of
nature. In the preface to the second edition of the Lyrical Ballads, Wordsworth
set out his theory of poetry. He defined poetry as “the spontaneous overflow of
powerful feelings and emotions”. His views on poetical style are the most
revolutionary. In his early career as a poet, Wordsworth wrote poems like An
Evening Walk and Descriptive Sketches. The Prelude is the record of his
development as a poet. It is a philosophical poem. He wrote some of the best
lyric poets in the English language like The Solitary Reaper, I Wandered Lonely
as a Cloud, Ode on the Intimations of Immorality, Resolution, and Independence, etc. Tintern Abbey is one of the greatest poems by Wordsworth.
Samuel Tylor Coleridge (1772-1814) wrote four poems for The Lyrical Ballads. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner is the most noteworthy. Kubla Khan, Christabel, Dejection an Ode, Frost at Midnight, etc. are other important poems. Biographia Literaria is his most valuable prose work. Coleridge’s lectures on Shakespeare are equally important. Lord Byron’s Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage was based on his travels. Don Juan ranks as one of the greatest satirical poems. The Vision of Judgment is a fine political satire in English.
PB Shelley (1792-1822) was a revolutionary figure
of the Romantic period. When Shelley was studying at Oxford, he wrote the pamphlet
The Necessity of Atheism which caused his expulsion from the university. Queen
Mab, The Revolt of Islam, and Alastor are his early poems. Prometheus Unbound is
a combination of lyrics and drama. Shelley wrote some of the sweetest
English lyrics like To a Skylark, The Cloud, To Night, etc. Of his many odes,
the most remarkable is Ode to the West Wind. Adonais is an elegy on the
death of John Keats.
John Keats
(1795-1821) is another great Romantic poet who wrote some excellent poems in
his short period of life. His Isabella deals with the murder of a lady’s lover
by her two wicked brothers. The unfinished epic poem Hyperion is modeled on
Milton’s Paradise Lost. The Eve of St Agnes is regarded as his finest narrative
poem. The story of Lamia is taken from Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy.
Endymion, Ode to a Nightingale, Ode on a Grecian Urn, Ode to Psyche, Ode on
Melancholy, and Ode to Autumn are very famous. His Letters give a clear
insight into his mind and artistic development. Robert Southey is a minor
Romantic poet. His poems, which are of great bulk, include Joan of Arc,
Thalaba, and The Holly-tree.
10 LATER
NINETEENTH CENTURY POETS (Victorian Poets)
Alfred
Lord Tennyson (1809-92) is a chief figure of later nineteenth-century poetry.
His volume of Poems contains notable poems like The Lady of Shalott, The
Lotos-Eaters, Ulysses, and Morte d’ Arthur. The story of Morte d’ Arthur is based on
Thomas Malory’s poem Morte d’ Arthur. In Memoriam(1850) caused a great stir when
it first appeared. It is a very long series of meditations upon the death of
Arthur Henry Hallam, Tennyson’s college friend, who died in Vienna in 1833. In
Memoriam is the most deeply emotional, and probably the greatest poetry he ever
produced. Maud and Other Poems was received with amazement by the public.
Idylls of the King, Enoch Arden, Haroldetc. are his other works.
Robert
Browning (1812-89) is an English poet and playwright whose mastery of
dramatic monologues made him one of the foremost Victorian poets.
He popularized ‘dramatic monologue’. The Ring and the Book is an
epic-length poem in which he justifies the ways of God to humanity
Browning is popularly known for his shorter poems, such as Porphyria’s
Lover, Rabbi Ben Ezra, How They Brought the Good News from Ghent to
Aix, and The Pied Piper of Hamelin. He married Elizabeth Barrett, another
famous poet during the Victorian period. Fra Lippo Lippi Andrea Del Sarto and
My Last Duchess are famous dramatic monologues.
Matthew
Arnold (1822-1888) was an English poet and cultural critic who
worked as an inspector of schools. He was the son of Thomas Arnold, the
famed headmaster of Rugby School. Arnold is sometimes called the third
great Victorian poet, along with Alfred Lord Tennyson and Robert
Browning. Arnold valued natural scenery for its peace and permanence in
contrast with the ceaseless change of human things. His descriptions are often
picturesque and marked by striking similes. Thyrsis, Dover Beach, and The
Scholar Gipsy are his notable poems.
Dante
Gabriel Rossetti was an English poet, illustrator, painter, and translator in late nineteenth-century England. Rossotti’s poems were criticized as
belonging to the ‘Fleshy School’ of poetry. Rossetti wrote about nature with
his eyes on it. Elizabeth Barrett Browning, wife of Robert Browning wrote some
excellent poems in her volume of Sonnets from the Portuguese.
AC Swinburne followed the style of Dante Gabriel
Rossetti. Swinburne’s famous poems works are Poems and Ballads and Tristram of
Lyonesse. Edward Fitzgerald translated the Rubaiyat of the Persian poet Omar
Khayyam. Fitzgerald’s translation is loose and did not stick too closely to the
original. Rudyard Kipling and Francis Thompson also wrote some good poems
during the later nineteenth century.
11
Nineteenth-Century Novelists (Victorian Novelists)
Jane
Austen 1775-1817 is one of the greatest novelists of nineteenth-century English
literature. Her first novel Pride and Prejudice (1813) deals with the life of
middle-class people. The style is smooth and charming. Her second novel Sense
and Sensibility followed the same general lines as Pride and Prejudice.
Northanger Abbey, Emma, Mansfield Park, and Persuasion are some of the other
famous works. Jane Austen’s plots are skillfully constructed. Her characters
are developed with minuteness and accuracy.
Charles Dickens (1812-1870) is considered one
of the greatest English novelists. Dickens has contributed some evergreen
characters to English literature. He was a busy successful novelist during his
lifetime. The Pickwick Papers and Sketches by Boz are two early novels. Oliver
Twist, Nicholas Nickleby, David Copperfield, Hard Times, A Tale of Two Cities, and Great Expectations are some of the most famous novels by Charles Dickens.
No English novelists excel like Dickens in the multiplicity of his characters and
situations. He creates a whole world of people for the readers. He sketched both
lower and middle-class people in London.
William
Makepeace Thackeray was born in Calcutta and sent to England for education.
William Thackeray is now chiefly remembered for his novel The Vanity Fair.
While Dickens was in the full tide of his success, Thackeray was struggling through
neglect and contempt for recognition. Thackeray’s genius blossomed slowly. Thackeray’s
characters are fearless and rough. He protested against the feeble characters
of his time. The Rose and the Ring, Rebecca and Rowena, and The Four Georges
are some of his works.
The Brontës Charlotte, Emily, and
Anne were the daughters of an Irish clergyman Patrick Brontë, who held a living in
Yorkshire. Charlotte Brontë’s first novel, The Professor failed to find a publisher and only
appeared after her death. Jane Eyre is her greatest novel. the plot is weak and
melodramatic. This was followed by Shirley and Villette. Her plots are
overcharged and she is largely restricted to her own experiments. Emily Brontë
wrote less than Charlottë. Her one and only novel Wuthering Heights (1847) is
unique in English literature. It is the passionate love story of Heathcliff and
Catherine. Anne Bronte’s two novels, Agnes Grey and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
are much inferior to those of her sisters, for she lacks nearly all their power
and intensity.
George Eliot (1819-1880) is the pen-name of Mary
Ann Evans. Adam Bede was her first novel. Her next novel, The Mill on the Floss
is partly autobiographical. Silas Marner is a shorter novel that gives
excellent pictures of village life. Romola, Middle March, and Daniel Deronda are
other works of George Eliot.
Thomas Hardy (1840-1928) published his first work
Desperate Remedies anonymously. Under the Greenwood Tree, one of the lightest
and most appealing of his novels established him as a writer. It was set in the
rural area he was soon to make famous as Wessex. Far From the Madding Crowd is
a tragi-comedy set in Wessex. The rural background of the story is an integral
part of the novel, which reveals the emotional depths which underlie rustic
life. The novel, The Return of the Native is a study of man’s helplessness before
the mighty Fate. The Mayor of Casterbridge also deals with the theme of Man
versus Destiny. Tess of the D’Urbervilles and Jude the Obscure aroused the
hostility of conventional readers due to their frank handling of sex and
religion. In the beginning, Tess of the D’Urbervilles was rejected by the
publishers. The outcry with the publication of Jude the Obscure led Hardy in
disgust to abandon novel writing. Thomas Hardy’s characters are mostly men and
women living close to the soil.
Mary
Shelley, the wife of Romantic poet PB Shelley is now remembered as the writer of
her famous novel of terror, Frankenstein. Frankenstein can be regarded as the
first attempt at science fiction. The Last Man is Mary Shelley’s other work.
Edgar
Allan Poe was a master of Mystery stories. Poe’s powerful description of
astonishing and unusual events has the attraction of terrible things. Some of
his major works are The Mystery of Marie Roget, The Murders in the Rue Morgue,
The Fall of the House of Usher, and The Mystery of Red Death. Besides poetry
collections like The Lady of the Last Minstrel, Marmion, The Lady of the Lake,
and The Lord of the Isles,
Sir Walter Scott produced an enormous number of
novels. Waverly, Old Mortality, The Black Dwarf, The Pirate, and Kenilworth are
some of them. He was too haste in writing novels and this led to careless,
imperfect stories. He has a great place in the field of historical novels.
Frederick
Marryat’s sea novels were popular in the nineteenth century. His earliest novel
was The Naval Officer. All his best books deal with the sea. Marryat has a
considerable gift for plain narrative and his humor is entertaining. Peter
Simple, Jacob Faithful, and Japhet in Search of His Father are some of his
famous works.
R.L.
Stevenson’s The Treasure Island, George Meredith’s The Egoist, Edward Lytton’s
The Last Days of Pompeii, Charles Reade’s Mask and Faces, Anthony Trollope’s
The Warden, Wilkie Collins’s The Moonstone, Joseph Conard’s Lord Jim, Nathaniel
Hawthrone’s The Scarlet Letter, etc. are some of the other famous works of
nineteenth-century English literature.
12 Other
Nineteenth-Century Prose
Charles
Lamb is one of the greatest essayists of the nineteenth century. Lamb started his
career as a poet but is now remembered for his well-known Essays of Elia. His
essays are unequal in English. He is so sensitive and so strong. Besides the Essays
of Elia, other famous essays are Dream Children and Tales from Shakespeare. His
wife, Mary Lamb also wrote some significant essays. William Hazlitt’s
reputation chiefly rests on his lectures and essays on literary and
general subjects. His lectures, Characters of Shakespeare’s Plays, The English
Poets, and The English Comic Writers are important.
Thomas De Quincey’s famous work is Confessions of
an English Opium Eater. It is written in the manner of dreams. His
Reminiscences of the English Lake Poets contain some good chapters on
Wordsworth and Coleridge.
Thomas Carlyle is another prose writer of the nineteenth century. His works consisted of translations, essays, and
biographies. Of these, the best is his translation of Goethe’s Wilhelm
Meister’s Apprenticeship, his The Life of Schiller, and his essays on Robert
Burns and Walter Scott.
Thomas Macaulay (Lord Macaulay) wrote
extensively. He contributed to The Encyclopedia of Britannica and The
Edinburgh Review. His History of England is filled with numerous picturesque
details.
Charles
Darwin is one of the greatest names in modern science. He devoted almost wholly
to biological and allied studies. His chief works are The Voyage of the Beagle,
Origin of Species, and The Descent of Man.
John
Ruskin’s works are of immense volume and complexity. His longest book is Modern
Painters. The Seven Lamps of Architecture and The Stones of Venice expound on his
views on artistic matters. Unto this Last is a series of articles on political
economy.
Samuel Butler, the grandson of Dr. Samuel Butler
was inspired by the Darwinian theory of evolution. Evolution Old and New,
Unconcious Memory, Essays on Life, Art and Science, The Way of All Flesh, etc.
rank him as one of the greatest prose writers of the nineteenth century. He was an acute
and original thinker. He exposed all kinds of religious, political, and social
shams and hypocrisies of his period. Besides being a great poet, Mathew Arnold
also excelled as an essayist. His prose works are large in bulk and wide in
range. Of them, all his critical essays are probably of the greatest value.
Essays in Criticism, Culture, and Anarchy, and Literature and Dogma have
permanent value.
Lewis
Carroll, another prose writer of the nineteenth century is now remembered for her
immortal work, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. Ever since its publication,
this novel continues to be popular among both children and adult readers.
13 Twentieth-century novels and other prose
The long
reign of Queen Victoria ended in 1901. There was a sweeping social reform and
unprecedented progress. The reawakening of social conscience found its
expression in the literature produced during this period.
Rudyard Kipling was born in Bombay but soon moved
to Lahore. He worked as a news reporter in Lahore. Kipling was a prolific and
versatile writer. His insistent proclamation of the superiority of the white
races, his support for colonization, his belief in progress and the value
of the machine, etc. found an echo in the hearts of many of his readers. His
best-known prose works include Kim, Life’s Handicap, Debits and Credits, and
Rewards and Fairies. He is now chiefly remembered for his greatest work, The
Jungle Book.
E.M Forster wrote five novels in his lifetime.
Where Angels Fear to Tread has well-drawn characters. Other novels are The
Longest Journey, A Room with a View, Howards End, and A Passage to India. A
Passage to India is unequal in English in its presentation of the complex
problems which were to be found in the relationship between English and native
people in India. E.M Forster portrayed the Indian scene in all its magic and
all its wretchedness.
H.G Wells began his career as a journalist. He
started his scientific romances with the publication of The Time Machine. The
Invisible Man, The War of the Worlds, The First Men in the Moon, and The Food of
the Gods are some of his important science romances. Ann Veronica, Kipps, and
The History of Mr. Polly are numbered among his sociological novels.
D.H Lawrence was a striking figure in the
twentieth-century literary world. He produced over forty volumes of fiction
during his period. The White Peacock is his earliest novel. The largely
autobiographical and extremely powerful novel was Sons and Lovers. It studies
with great insight the relationship between a son and mother. By many, it is
considered the best of all his works. Then came The Rainbow, suppressed as
obscene, which treats again the conflict between man and woman. Women in Love
is another important work. Lady Chatterley’s Lover is a novel in which sexual
experience is handled with a wealth of physical detail and uninhibited
language. Lawrence also excelled both as a poet and short-story writer.
James Joyce is a serious novelist, whose concern
is chiefly with human relationships- man in relation to himself, to society,
and to the whole race. He was born in Dublin, Ireland. His first work,
Dubliners, is followed by a largely autobiographical novel A Portrait of the
Artist as a Young Man. It is an intense account of a developing writer. The
protagonist of the story, Stephen Dedalus is James Joyce himself. The character
Stephen Dedalus appears again in his highly complex novel, Ulysses published in
1922. Joyce’s mastery of language, integrity, brilliance, and power is
noticeable in his novel titled Finnegan's Wake.
Virginia Woolf is famed both as a literary critic
and novelist. Her first novel, The Voyage Out is told in a conventional
narrative manner. A deeper study of characters can be found in her later works
such as Night and Day, Jacob’s Room, To the Lighthouse, Mrs. Dalloway, and
Orlando. In addition to her novels, Virginia Woolf wrote a number of essays on
cultural subjects. Woolf rejected the conventional concepts of the novel. She
replaced the emphasis on the incident, external description, and straightforward
narration by using the technique “Stream of Consciousness”. James Joyce and
Virginia Woolf popularized this writing technique.
George
Orwell became a figure of outstanding importance because of Animal Farm. It is
a political allegory of the degeneration of communist ideals into dictatorship.
Utterly different was Nineteen Eighty-Four on the surveillance of state over
its citizen. Burmese Days and The Road to Wigan Pier are other works.
William
Golding deals with man’s instinct to destroy what is good, whether it is
material or spiritual. His best-known novel is Lord of the Flies. The
Scorpion God, The Inheritors, and Free Fall are other notable works.
Somerset Maugham was a realist who sketched the
cosmopolitan life through his characters. The Moon and Sixpence, Mrs. Craddock, and The Painted Veil are some of his novels. His best novel is Of Human
Bondage. It is a study of frustration, which had a strong autobiographical
element. Kingsly Amis’s Lucky Jim, Take a Girl Like You, One Fat Englishman,
and Girl is notable works in the twentieth century.
14 Twentieth-Century Drama
After a
hundred years of insignificance, drama again appeared as an important form in
the twentieth century. Like the novelists in the 20th century, most of the
important dramatists were chiefly concerned with the contemporary social scene.
Many playwrights experimented in the theatres. There were revolutionary changes
in both the theme and presentation.
John Galsworthy was a social reformer who showed
both sides of the problems in his plays. He had a warm sympathy for the victims
of social injustice. Of his best-known plays, The Silver Box deals with the
inequality of justice, Strife with the struggle between Capital and Labour, and Justice with the meaninglessness of the judiciary system.
George Bernard Shaw is one of the greatest
dramatists of the 20th century. The first Shavian play is considered to be Arms and
the Man. It is an excellent and amusing stage piece that pokes fun at the
romantic conception of the soldier. The Devil’s Disciple, Caesar and Cleopatra,
and The Man of Destiny are also noteworthy. Man and Superman is Shaw’s most
important play which deals with the theme half seriously and half comically.
Religion and social problems are again the main topics in Major Barbara. The
Doctor’s Dilemma is an amusing satire. Social conventions and social weaknesses
were treated again in Pygmalion, a witty and highly entertaining study of class distinction. St Joan deals with the problems in Christianity. The Apple
Cart, Geneva, The Millionaire, Too True to be Good, and On the Rocks are Shaw’s
minor plays.
J M Synge
was the greatest dramatist in the rebirth of the Irish theatre. His plays are
few in number but they are of a stature to place him among the greatest
playwrights in the English language. Synge was inspired by the beauty of his
surroundings, the humor, tragedy, and poetry of the life of the simple
fisher-folk in the Isles of Aran. The Shadow of the Glen is a comedy based on
an old folktale, which gives a good romantic picture of Irish peasant life. It
was followed by Riders to the Sea, a powerful, deeply moving tragedy that
deals with the toll taken by the sea in the lives of the fisher-folk of Ireland. The Winker’s Wedding and The Well of the Saints are other notable
works.
Samuel Beckett, the greatest proponent of Absurd
Theatre is most famous for his play, Waiting for Godot. It is a static
representation without structure or development, using only meandering,
seemingly incoherent dialogue to suggest the despair of society in the post-World
War period. Another famous play by Beckett is Endgame.
Harold Pinter was influenced by Samuel Beckett.
His plays are quite short and set in an enclosed space. His characters are
always in doubt about their function, and in fear of something or someone
‘outside’. The Birthday Party, The Dumb Waiter, A Night Out, The Homecoming, and
Silence are his most notable plays. James Osborne’s Look Back in Anger gave the
strongest tonic to the concept of Angry Young Man. Watch it Come Down, A
Portrait of Me, Inadmissible Evidence, etc. are his other major works.
T.S Eliot wrote seven dramas. They are Sweeney Agonistes, The Rock, Murder in the Cathedral, The Family Reunion, The Cocktail Party, The Confidential Clerk, and The Elder Statesman. Juno and the Paycock, The Plough and the Stars, and The Silver Tassie marked Sean O’Casey out as the greatest new figure in the inter-War years. His own experience enabled him to study the life of the Dublin slums with a warm understanding.
Another leading
playwright of the 20th century was Arnold Wesker. Wesker narrated the lives of
working-class people in his plays. Roots, Chicken Soup with Barley, and I’m
Talking about Jerusalem are his famous works. Bertolt Brecht, J.B Priestley,
Somerset Maugham, Christopher Fry, Peter Ustinov, Tom Stoppard, Bernard Kops,
Henry Livings, Alan Bennett, et al are other important playwrights of twentieth-century English literature.
15
Twentieth-Century Poetry
The
greatest figure in the poetry of the early part of the Twentieth century was
the Irish poet William Butler Yeats. Like so many of his contemporaries, Yeats
was acutely conscious of the spiritual barrenness of his age. W.B Yeats sought
to escape into the land of ‘faery’ and looked for his themes in Irish legend.
He is one of the most difficult modern poets. His trust was in the
imagination and intuition of man rather than in scientific reasoning. Yeats
believed in fairies, magic, and other forms of superstition. He studied Indian
philosophy and Vedas. An Irish Seaman Foresees His Death, The Tower, The Green
Helmet, etc. are his major poems. With the possible exception of Yeats, no twentieth-century poet has been held in such esteem by his fellow poets as T.S Eliot.
Eliot’s
first volume of verse, Prufrock and Other Observations portrays the boredom,
emptiness, and pessimism of its days. His much-discussed poem The Waste
Land(1922) made a tremendous impact on the post-War generation, and it is
considered one of the important documents of its age. The poem is difficult to
understand in detail, but its general aim is clear. The poem is built around the
symbols of drought and flood, representing death and rebirth. The poem
progresses in five movements, “The Burial of the Dead”, “The Game of the
Chess”, “The Fire Sermon”, “Death by Water”, and “What the Thunder Said”.
Eliot’s poem Ash Wednesday is probably his most difficult. Obscure images and
symbols and the lack of a clear, logical structure make the poem difficult.
W.H Auden
was an artist of great virtuosity, a ceaseless experimenter in verse form, with
a fine ear for the rhythm and music of words. He was modern in tone and
selection of themes. Auden’s later poems revealed a new note of mysticism in
his approach to human problems. He was outspokenly anti-Romantic and stressed
an objective attitude. Thomas Hardy began his career as a poet. Though he was
not able to find a publisher, he continued to write poetry. Hardy’s verses
consist of short lyrics describing nature and natural beauty. Like his novels,
the poems reveal a concern with man’s unequal struggle against the mighty fate.
Wessex Poems, Winter Words, and Collected Poems are his major poetry works.
G.M Hopkins is a unique figure in the history of
English poetry. No modern poet has been the center of more controversy or the
cause of more misunderstanding. He was very unconventional in his writing
techniques. He used Sprung-rhythm, counterpoint rhythm, internal rhythms,
alliteration, assonance, and coinages in his poems.
Dylan Thomas was an enemy of intellectualism in
verse. He drew upon the human body, sex, and the Old Testament for much of his
imagery and complex wordplay. His verses are splendidly colorful and musical.
Appreciation of landscape, religious and mystical association, sadness, and
quietness were very often selected as themes for his verses.
Sylvia Plath and her husband Ted Hughes composed
some brilliant poems in the 20th century. Plath’s mental imbalance which
brought her to suicide can be seen in her poetry collections titled
Ariel, The Colossus, and Crossing the Water. Ted Hughes was a poet of animals
and nature. His major collection of poetry is The Hawk in the Rain, Woodwork,
Crow, Crow Wakes, and Eat Crow. R.S Thomas, Philip Larkin, Kingsley Amis, Peter
Porter, Seamus Heaney, et al also added to the beauty of 20th-century English
poetry.
War Poets
The First
World War brought to public notice many poets, particularly among the young men
in the armed forces, while it provided a new source of inspiration for writers of
established reputations. Rupert Brooke, Siegfried Sassoon, and Wilfred Owen are
the major War poets. Rupert Brooke’s famous sonnet “If I should die, think only
this of me” has appeared in so many anthologies of twentieth-century verse.
Brooke turned to nature and simple pleasures for inspiration.
Sassoon
wrote violent and embittered poems. Sassoon painted the horrors of life and
death in the trenches and hospitals. Wilfred Owen was the greatest of the war
poets. At the beginning of his literary career, Owen wrote in the romantic
tradition of John Keats and Lord Tennyson. Owen was a gifted artist with a fine
feeling for words. He greatly experimented with verse techniques.
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