139-) English Literature
Leigh Hunt – Summary
Hunt,
at his best, in some essays and his Autobiography (1850; in part a rewriting of
Lord Byron and Some of His Contemporaries, 1828), has a distinctive charm. He
excels in perceptive judgments of his contemporaries, from Keats to Alfred,
Lord Tennyson. As a Radical journalist, though not much interested in the
details of politics, he attacked oppression with indignation.
The
poems in Juvenilia (1801), his first volume, show his love for Italian
literature. He looked to Italy for a “freer spirit of versification” and
translated a great deal of Italian poetry, and in The Story of Rimini (1816),
published in the year of his meeting with Keats, he reintroduced a freedom of
movement in English couplet verse lost in the 18th century. From him Keats
derived his delight in colour and imaginative sensual experience and a first
acquaintance with Italian poetry. Much of Hunt’s best verse was published in
Foliage (1818) and Hero and Leander, and Bacchus and Ariadne (1819).
In
1808 Leigh Hunt and his brother John had launched the weekly Examiner, which
advocated abolition of the slave trade, Catholic emancipation, and reform of
Parliament and the criminal law. For their attacks on the unpopular prince
regent, the brothers were imprisoned in 1813. Leigh Hunt, who continued to
write The Examiner in prison, was regarded as a martyr in the cause of liberty.
After his release (1815) he moved to Hampstead, home of Keats, whom he
introduced in 1817 to Shelley, a friend since 1811. The Examiner supported the
new Romantic poets against attacks by Blackwood’s Magazine on what it called
“the Cockney school of poetry,” supposedly led by Hunt.
No comments:
Post a Comment