History of English Literature from "Beowulf" to Swinburne
A Preface to a book on the History of English Literature is apt to be an apology, for a writer must be conscious of his inability to deal with a subject so immense and so multiplex in its aspects. This volume does not pretend to be an encyclopædia of our literature; or to include all the names of authors and of their works. Selection has been necessary, and in the fields of philosophy and theology but a few names appear. The writer, indeed, would willingly have omitted not a few of the minor authors in pure literature, and devoted his space only to the masters. But each of these springs from an underwood, as it were, of the thought and effort of men less conspicuous, whom it were ungrateful, and is practically impossible, to pass by in silence. Nevertheless the attempt has been made to deal most fully with the greatest names.
It is unhappily the fact that the works of a majority of the earlier authors are scarcely accessible except in the publications of learned societies or in very limited editions; but from Chaucer onwards the Globe Editions are open to all; and the great Cambridge History of English Literature is invaluable as a guide to the Bibliography. It is better to study even a little of the greatest authors than to read many books about them. If the writer should perchance succeed in bringing any readers to the works of the immortals his purpose will be fulfilled But readers, like poets and anglers, are born to be so ; and when born under a fortunate star do not need to be allured or compelled to come into the Muses' paradise.
That sins of commission as well as of omission will be discovered the author cannot doubt, for through much reading and writing they that look out of window are darkened, and errors come.
CHAPTER
XV. Popular Poetry. Ballads
XXIII. Late Jacobean and Caroline Prose: Burton — Herbert of Cherbury — Browne.
XXXIII. Later Georgian Novelists: Frances Burney — Mrs. Radcliffe — Maria Edgeworth — Charles Brockden Brown — Jane Austen — Walter Scott, the Novelist — James Fenimore Cooper — Washington Irving.
Andrew Lang
HISTORY OF
ENGLISH LITERATURE
FROM
"BEOWULF" TO SWINBURNE
ANDREW LANG, M.A.
LATE HON. FELLOW OF MERTON COLLEGE OXFORD
ANGLO-SAXON LITERATURE.
ANGLO-SAXON CHRISTIAN POETRY.
ANGLO-SAXON LEARNING AND PROSE.
AFTER THE NORMAN CONQUEST.
GEOFFREY OF MONMOUTH.
LAYAMON'S "BRUT".
THE ROMANCES IN RHYME.
ALLITERATIVE ROMANCES AND POEMS.
CHAUCER.
"PIERS PLOWMAN." GOWER.
THE SUCCESSORS OF CHAUCER.
LATE MEDIAEVAL PROSE.
MALORY.
EARLY SCOTTISH LITERATURE.
POPULAR POETRY. BALLADS.
RISE OF THE DRAMA.
WYATT AND SURREY. GASCOIGNE. SACKVILLE.
PROSE OF THE RENAISSANCE.
THE ELIZABETHAN STAGE AND PLAYWRIGHTS.
OTHER DRAMATISTS.
ELIZABETHAN AND JACOBEAN PROSE WRITERS.
LATE ELIZABETHAN AND JACOBEAN POETS.
LATE JACOBEAN AND CAROLINE PROSE.
CAROLINE POETS.
RESTORATION THEATRE.
AUGUSTAN POETRY.
AUGUSTAN PROSE.
THE ROMANTIC MOVEMENT.
LATER GEORGIAN NOVELISTS.
POETS AFTER WORDSWORTH.
LATE VICTORIAN POETS.
LATEST GEORGIAN AND VICTORIAN NOVELISTS.
HISTORIANS.