ABSTRACT

The Critical Heritage gathers together a large body of critical sources on major figures in literature. Each volume presents contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling students and researchers to read for themselves, for example, comments on early performances of Shakespeare's plays, or reactions to the first publication of Jane Austen's novels.
The carefully selected sources range from landmark essays in the history of criticism to journalism and contemporary opinion, and little published documentary material such as letters and diaries. Significant pieces of criticism from later periods are also included, in order to demonstrate the fluctuations in an author's reputation.
Each volume contains an introduction to the writer's published works, a selected bibliography, and an index of works, authors and subjects.

chapter |59 pages

Introduction

part |25 pages

Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect

chapter 1|2 pages

Thomas Blacklock writes from the capital

September 1786

chapter 2|2 pages

Unsigned notice in Edinburgh Magazine

iv (October 1786), 284–8

chapter 3|2 pages

Correspondence in Edinburgh Evening Courant

November 1786

chapter 4|5 pages

Henry Mackenzie, unsigned essay in Lounger

97 (9 December 1786)

chapter 5|4 pages

James Anderson, unsigned review in Monthly Review

lxxxv (December 1786), 439–48

chapter 6|1 pages

Unsigned notice in New Annual Register

vii (1787), 279–80

chapter 7|4 pages

John Logan questions the legend

February 1787

chapter 8|1 pages

Unsigned notice in Critical Review

1st ser. lxiii (May 1787), 387–8

chapter 10|3 pages

James Macaulay questions the legend

1787

part |92 pages

Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect

chapter 11|2 pages

Notices in Universal Magazine

May 1787

chapter 12|2 pages

Unsigned notice in New Town and Country Magazine

August 1787

chapter 13|2 pages

Unsigned notice in General Magazine and Impartial Review

i (1787), 79–80

chapter 14|1 pages

James Anderson, unsigned notice in Review

lxxvii (December 1787), 491

chapter 15|1 pages

William Cowper on Bums

July and August 1787

chapter 16|1 pages

Dorothy Wordsworth on Burns

6, 16 December 1787

chapter 17|2 pages

Verse attack and verse tribute

1788, 1789

chapter 18|2 pages

A. F. Tytler on ‘Tam o’ Shanter’

March 1791

chapter 19|2 pages

Robert Heron on three poems

1793

chapter 20|1 pages

Joseph Ritson: Burns and song

1794

chapter 23|4 pages

Coleridge on Burns

1796–1817

chapter 24|3 pages

Charles Lamb on Burns

1796–1826

chapter 25|3 pages

Thomas Duncan on Burns

1796

chapter 26|11 pages

Robert Heron, memoir in Monthly Magazine

June 1797

chapter 27|1 pages

William Reid, unsigned verse tribute

1797

chapter 28|2 pages

Alexander Campbell on Burns

1798, 1816

chapter 29|1 pages

Wordsworth: ‘the presence of hum; life in Burns’

February 1799

chapter 30|22 pages

James Currie on Burns

1800

chapter 31|5 pages

Robert Nares, unsigned review of Currie's edition in British Critic

xvi (October 1800), 366–79 and xvii (April 1801), 416–22

chapter 32|2 pages

Thomas Stewart: ‘The Jolly Beggars'

1800, 1801

chapter 33|5 pages

William and Dorothy Wordsworth on Burns

1802–42

chapter 34|4 pages

David Irving on Burns

1804

chapter 35|2 pages

Southey's letters on Burns

1804–5

chapter 36|5 pages

Sir Egerton Brydges on Burns

September 1805

chapter 37|3 pages

Thomas Moore: Burns and song

1807, 1841

chapter 38|2 pages

Byron on Burns

1809

part |259 pages

R. H. Cromek, Reliques of Robert Burns

chapter 39|18 pages

Francis Jeffrey, from an unsigned review in Edinburgh Review

xiii (January 1809), 249–76

chapter 40|14 pages

Walter Scott, from an unsigned review in Quarterly Review

i (February 1809), 19–36

chapter 41|1 pages

From an unsigned review in Universal Magazine

xi (February 1809), 132–9

chapter 42|4 pages

James Montgomery, from an unsigned review in Eclectic Review

v (May 1809), 393–410

chapter 43|3 pages

John Hodgson, from an unsigned review in Monthly Review

(December 1809), 399–409

chapter 45|30 pages

Josiah Walker on Burns

1811

chapter 46|3 pages

William Peebles on ‘Burnomania’

1811

chapter 47|3 pages

The first book on Burns's poetry

1812

chapter 48|4 pages

Henry Crabb Robinson on Burns

1812–29

chapter 49|2 pages

Byron on Burns

1813

chapter 50|8 pages

Scott on Burns

1813–30

chapter 53|16 pages

Wordsworth on Burns

1816

chapter 55|2 pages

John Wilson in Blackwood's Magazine

I, iii (June 1817), 261–6

chapter 56|8 pages

Hazlitt lectures on Burns

1818

chapter 57|2 pages

Keats on Burns

1818–19

chapter 58|2 pages

Burns and Crabbe

1819

chapter 59|13 pages

John Wilson in Blackwood's Magazine

iv (February 1819), 521–9

chapter 60|4 pages

Thomas Campbell on Burns

1819

chapter 61|1 pages

Byron on Burns

1821

chapter 62|1 pages

Hazlitt on Burns

1821–5

chapter 63|1 pages

Blackwood's Magazine on Burns

xi, lxiii (March) and lxi (July), 1822

chapter 64|1 pages

Hew Ainslie on Burns

1822

chapter 65|13 pages

Allan Cunningham on Burns

1824, 1825

chapter 66|9 pages

J. G. Lockhart, Life of Robert Burns

1828

chapter 67|43 pages

Thomas Carlyle on Lockhart's Life of Burns

December 1828

chapter 68|1 pages

Macaulay from an unsigned review, Edinburgh Review

xlvii, 93 (January 1828), 15

chapter 69|9 pages

‘Christopher North’ in Blackwood's Magazine

1829–34

chapter 70|2 pages

Wordsworth on Burns

1843

chapter 71|16 pages

Allan Cunningham on Burns

1834

chapter 72|8 pages

James Hogg on Burns

1836

chapter 73|5 pages

Thomas De Quincey looks back

1837

chapter 75|3 pages

Ralph Waldo Emerson: an American tribute

1840, 1859