The Best of the World's Classics

VOL. V

GREAT BRITAIN AND
IRELAND—III

1740—1881


CONTENTS

Vol. V—Great Britain and Ireland—III

Page
[James Boswell]—(Born in 1740, died in 1795.)
I [Boswell's Introduction to Johnson.]
(From Boswell's "Life of Johnson")[3]
II [Johnson's Audience with George III.]
(From Boswell's "Life of Johnson")[8]
III [The Meeting of Johnson and John Wilkes.]
(From Boswell's "Life of Johnson")[15]
IV [Johnson's Wedding-Day.]
(From Boswell's "Life of Johnson")[21]
[William Wordsworth]—(Born in 1770, died in 1850.)
[A Poet Defined.]
(From the Preface to the second edition of "Lyrical
Ballads")[23]
[Sir Walter Scott]—(Born in 1771, died in 1832.)
I [The Arrival of the Master of Ravenswood.]
(From Chapter XXXIII of "The Bride of Lammermoor")[31]
II [The Death of Meg Merriles.]
(From Chapter LV of "Guy Mannering")[35]
III [A Vision of Rob Roy.]
(From Chapter XXIII of "Rob Roy")[40]
IV [Queen Elizabeth and Amy Robsart at Kenilworth.]
(From "Kenilworth")[48]
V [The Illness and Death of Lady Scott.]
(From Scott's "Journal")[62]
[Samuel Taylor Coleridge]—(Born in 1772, died in 1834.)
I [Does Fortune Favor Fools?]
(From "A Sailor's Fortune")[70]
II [The Destiny of the United States.]
(From the "Table Talk")[76]
[Robert Southey]—(Born in 1774, died in 1843.)
[Nelson's Death at Trafalgar.]
(From the "Life of Nelson")[80]
[Walter Savage Landor]—(Born in 1775, died in 1864.)
I [The Death of Hofer][87]
II [Napoleon and Pericles][91]
[Charles Lamb]—(Born in 1775, died in 1834.)
I [Dream Children—A Reverie.]
(From the "Essays of Elia")[93]
II [Poor Relations.]
(From the "Essays of Elia")[99]
III [The Origin of Roast Pig.]
(From the "Essays of Elia")[102]
IV [That We Should Rise with the Lark.]
(From the "Essays of Elia")[107]
[William Hazlitt]—(Born in 1778, died in 1830.)
[Hamlet.]
(From the "Characters of Shakespeare's Plays")[111]
[Thomas de Quincey]—(Born in 1785, died in 1859.)
I [Dreams of an Opium-Eater.]
(From the "Confessions of an English Opium-Eater")[115]
II [Joan of Arc.]
(From the "Biographical and Historical Essays")[123]
III [Charles Lamb.]
(From the "Literary Reminiscences")[128]
[Lord Byron]—(Born in 1788, died in 1824.)
I [Of His Mother's Treatment of Him.]
(A letter to his half-sister, Augusta)[134]
II [To His Wife after the Separation.]
(A letter written in Italy)[138]
III [To Sir Walter Scott.]
(A letter written in Italy)[140]
IV [Of Art and Nature as Poetical Subjects.]
(From the "Reply to Bowles")[143]
[Percy Bysshe Shelley]—(Born in 1792, died in 1822.)
I [In Defense of Poetry.]
(From an essay written some time in 1820-21)[151]
II [The Baths of Caracalla.]
(From a letter to Thomas Love Peacock)[155]
III [The ruins of Pompeii.]
(A letter to Thomas Love Peacock)[158]
[George Grote]—(Born in 1794, died in 1871.)
I [The Mutilation of the Hermæ.]
(From Chapter LVIII of the "History of Greece")[165]
II [If Alexander Had Lived.]
(From Chapter XCIV of the "History of Greece")[172]
[Thomas Carlyle]—(Born in 1795, died in 1881.)
I [Charlotte Corday.]
(From the "History of the French Revolution")[179]
II [The Blessedness of Work.]
(From "Past and Present")[187]
III [Cromwell.]
(From "Heroes and Hero-Worship, and the Heroic in History")[190]
IV [In Praise of Those Who Toil.]
(From "Sartor Resartus")[201]
V [The Certainty of Justice.]
(From "Past and Present")[202]
VI [The Greatness of Scott.]
(From the essay on Lockhart's "Life of Scott")[206]
VII [Boswell and His Book.]
(From the essay on Croker's edition of Boswell)[214]
VIII [Might Burns Have Been Saved?]
(From the essay on Burns)[223]
[Lord Macaulay]—(Born in 1800, died in 1859.)
I [Puritans and Royalists.]
(From the essay on Milton)[233]
II [Cromwell's Army.]
(From Chapter I of the "History of England")[238]
III [The Opening of the Trial of Warren Hastings.]
(From the essay on Hastings)[242]
IV [The Gift of Athens to Man.]
(From the essay on Mitford's "History of Greece")[248]
V [The Pathos of Byron's Life.]
(From the essay on Moore's "Life of Byron")[251]