Various

English Poets of the Eighteenth Century


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TO A YOUNG LADY (1782)

       THE SHRUBBERY (1782)

       THE TASK (1785), BOOK I, ll. 141–180; II, 1–47, 206–254;

       III, 108-l33; IV, 1–41; V, 379–445; VI, 56–117, 560–580

       ON THE RECEIPT OF MY MOTHER'S PICTURE (1798)

       TO MARY (WR. c. 1795, PUBL. 1803)

       THE CASTAWAY (WR. c. 1799, PUBL. 1803)

      WILLIAM LISLE BOWLES EVENING (1789) DOVER CLIFFS (1789)

      ROBERT BURNS

       MARY MORISON (WR. 1784?, PUBL. 1800)

       THE HOLY FAIR (WR. 1785, PUBL. 1786)

       TO A LOUSE (WR. 1785, PUBL. 1786)

       EPISTLE TO J. LAPRAIK (WR. 1785, PUBL. 1786), STANZAS 9–13

       THE COTTER'S SATURDAY NIGHT (WR. 1785–86, PUBL. 1786)

       TO A MOUSE (1786)

       TO A MOUNTAIN DAISY (1786)

       EPISTLE TO A YOUNG FRIEND (1786)

       A BARD'S EPITAPH (1786)

       ADDRESS TO THE UNCO GUID (1787)

       JOHN ANDERSON, MY Jo (WR. c. 1788, PUBL. 1790)

       THE LOVELY LASS OF INVERNESS (WR. c. 1788, PUBL. 1796)

       A RED, RED ROSE (WR. c. 1788, PUBL. 1796)

       AULD LANG SYNE (WR. c. 1788, PUBL. 1796)

       SWEET AFTON (WR. c. 1789, PUBL. 1796)

       THE HAPPY TRIO (WR. 1789, PUBL. 1796)

       TO MARY IN HEAVEN (WR. 1789, PUBL. 1796)

       TAM O' SHANTER (WR. 1790, PUBL. 1791)

       AE FOND KISS (WR. 1791, PUBL. 1792)

       DUNCAN GRAY (WR. 1792, PUBL. 1798)

       HIGHLAND MARY (WR. 1792, PUBL. 1799)

       SCOTS, WHA HAE (WR. 1793, PUBL. 1794)

       IS THERE FOR HONEST POVERTY (WR. 1794, PUBL. 1795)

       LAST MAY A BRAW WOOER (WR. c. 1795, PUBL. 1799)

       O, WERT THOU IN THE CAULD BLAST (WR. 1796, PUBL. 1800)

      ERASMUS DARWIN

       THE BOTANIC GARDEN (1789–92), PART I, CANTO I, ll. 1–38;

       PART II, CANTO I, ll. 299–310

      WILLIAM BLAKE

       TO WINTER (1783)

       SONG: FRESH FROM THE DEWY HILL (1783)

       TO THE MUSES (1783)

       INTRODUCTION TO SONGS OF INNOCENCE (1789)

       THE LAMB (1789)

       THE LITTLE BLACK BOY (1789)

       A CRADLE SONG (1789)

       HOLY THURSDAY (1789)

       THE DIVINE IMAGE (1789)

       ON ANOTHER'S SORROW (1789)

       THE BOOK OF THEL (1789)

       THE FRENCH REVOLUTION (PRINTED 1791), ll, 198–240

       A SONG OP LIBERTY (c. 1792), §§ 1–3, 12, 18–20, AND CHORUS

       THE FLY (1794)

       THE TIGER (1794)

       HOLY THURSDAY (1794)

       THE GARDEN OF LOVE (1794)

       A LITTLE BOY LOST (1794)

       THE SCHOOL-BOY (1794)

       LONDON (1794)

       AUGURIES OF INNOCENCE (WR. c. 1801–03), LL. 1–44, 73–90

       VERSES FROM "MILTON" (ENGRAVED c. 1804)

       AND DID THOSE FEET IN ANCIENT TIME

       REASON AND IMAGINATION

       VERSES FROM "JERUSALEM" (ENGRAVED c. 1804–11)

       TO THE DEISTS

      GEORGE CANNING

       THE PROGRESS OF MAN (1798), CANTO XXIII, ll. 7–16, 17–30

       THE NEW MORALITY (1798), ll. 87–157

      CAROLINA, LADY NAIRNE THE LAND O' THE LEAL (WR. 1798)

      INTRODUCTION

       Table of Contents

      I. ORTHODOXY AND CLASSICISM QUIESCENT (1700–1725) The clearest portrayal of the prominent features of an age may sometimes be seen in poems which reveal what men desire to be rather than what they are; and which express sentiments typical, even commonplace, rather than individual. John Pomfret's Choice (1700) is commonplace indeed; it was never deemed great, but it was remarkably popular. "No composition in our language," opined Dr. Johnson, "has been oftener perused,"—an opinion quite incredible until one perceives how intimately the poem harmonizes with the prevalent mood of its contemporary readers. It was written by a clergyman (a circumstance not insignificant); its form is the heroic couplet; its content is a wish, for a peaceful and civilized mode of existence. And what; is believed to satisfy that longing? A life of leisure; the necessaries of comfort plentifully provided, but used temperately; a country-house upon a hillside, not too distant from the city; a little garden bordered by a rivulet; a quiet-study furnished with the classical Roman poets; the society of a few friends, men who know the world as well as books, who are loyal to their nation and their church, and whose; conversation is intellectually vigorous but always polite; the occasional companionship of a woman of virtue, wit, and poise of manner; and, above all, the avoidance of public or private contentions. Culture and peace—and the greater of these is peace! The sentiment characterizes the first quarter of the eighteenth century.

      The poets of that period had received an abundant heritage from the Elizabethans, the Cavaliers, Dryden, and Milton. It was a poetry of passionate love, chivalric honor, indignant satire, and sublime faith. Much of it they admired, but their admiration was tempered with fear. They heard therein the tones of violent generations—of men whose intensity, though yielding extraordinary beauty and grandeur, yielded also obscurity and extravagance; men whom the love of women too often impelled to utter fantastic hyperbole, and the love of honor to glorify preposterous adventures; quarrelsome men, who assailed their opponents with rancorous personalities; doctrinaires, who employed their fiery energy of mind in the creation of rigid systems of religion and government; uncompromising men, who devoted to the support of those systems their fortunes and lives, drenched the land in the blood of a civil war, executed a king, presently restored his dynasty, and finally exiled it again, thus maintaining during half a century a general insecurity of life and property which checked the finer growths of civilization. Their successors trusted that the compromise of 1688 had reduced political and sectarian affairs to a state of calm equilibrium; and they desired to cultivate the fruits of serenity by fostering in all things the spirit of moderation. In poetry, as in life, they tended more and more to discountenance manifestations of vehemence. Even the poetry of Dryden, with its reflections of the stormy days through which he had struggled, seemed to them, though gloriously leading the way toward perfection, to fall short of equability of temper and smoothness of form. To work like Defoe's True-Born Englishman (1701) and Hymn to the Pillory (1703), combative in spirit and free in style, they gave only guarded and temporary approval.

      Inevitably the change of mood entailed losses. Sir Henry Wotton's Character of a Happy Life (c. 1614) treats the same theme as Pomfret's Choice; but Pomfret's contemporaries were rarely if ever visited by such gleams as shine in Wotton's lines describing the happy man as one

      who never understood How deepest wounds are given by praise,

      and as one

      Who God doth late and early pray

       More of his grace than gifts to lend.

      Such touches of