ABSTRACT

This set offers a representitive collection of the verse satire of the Romantic period, published between the mid-1780s and the mid-1830s. As well as two single-author volumes, from William Gifford and Thomas Moore, there is also a wealth of rare, unedited material.

chapter

Introduction

part |10 pages

Robert Burns

chapter |3 pages

Overview

part |7 pages

William Cowper

part |7 pages

John Wolcot (‘Peter Pindar’)

chapter |3 pages

Overview

chapter |4 pages

‘Ode to Burke’ (1792)

part |4 pages

Thomas Spence

part |6 pages

John Thelwall and Daniel Isaac Eaton

part |9 pages

Daniel Isaac Eaton (‘Antitype’)

part |12 pages

Anon. (attrib. to Robert Merry and Joseph Jekyll)

part |6 pages

Samuel Taylor Coleridge

part |3 pages

Carolina Oliphant (Lady Nairne)

part |4 pages

William Blake

part |9 pages

Mary Robinson

part |5 pages

William Wordsworth

chapter |3 pages

Overview

part |7 pages

George Canning

chapter |3 pages

Overview

part |3 pages

Anon., from The Anti-Gallican; or Standard of British Loyalty, Religion and Liberty

part |6 pages

Anon., from The Scourge

part |12 pages

Anna Laetitia Barbauld

chapter |2 pages

Overview

part |4 pages

Charles Lamb

chapter |2 pages

Overview

part |6 pages

Jane Taylor

chapter |2 pages

Overview

part |3 pages

John Keats

chapter |2 pages

Overview

part |5 pages

Percy Bysshe Shelley

part |11 pages

William Hone

chapter |3 pages

Overview

chapter |8 pages

‘Non Mi Ricordo!’ (1820)

part |8 pages

George Gordon, Lord Byron

chapter |3 pages

Overview

chapter |5 pages

‘The Irish Avatar’ (1821)

part |6 pages

John Hughes

part |16 pages

Horace Smith

part |4 pages

Anon., from The Globe and Traveller 1

chapter |1 pages

Overview

chapter |3 pages

‘Discovery of Another Poet’ (1825)1

part |5 pages

Anon. (attrib. Theodore Hook)

chapter |2 pages

Overview

part |13 pages

W[illiam] T[homas] Moncrieff

part |5 pages

Anon., from The Prompter 1

part |6 pages

John Wilson (‘Christopher North’)

part |6 pages

Maria Abdy

part |6 pages

George Cruikshank and Anon. 1

chapter |5 pages

Overview