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. The Collected Critical Heritage set will be available as a set of 68 volumes and the series will also be available in mini sets selected by period (in slipcase boxes) and as individual volumes.

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

chapter |1 pages

Note on the Text

chapter 29|35 pages

Thomas Rymer, fromA Short View of Tragedy

1693

chapter 30|3 pages

John Dennis on Rymer

1693

chapter |2 pages

31. John Dryden on Rymer

1693

chapter |23 pages

32. Charles Gildon on Rymer

1694

chapter 33|1 pages

John Dryden on Rymer

1698

chapter 35|4 pages

Unsigned work, Shakespeare defended from Collier

1698

chapter 36|2 pages

John Dennis, Shakespeare defended

1698

chapter 37|9 pages

James Drake, Shakespeare defended

1699

chapter 38|28 pages

Colley Cibber, from his adaptation of Richard III

1700

chapter 39|1 pages

Samuel Cobb, Shakespeare's artless tragedies

1700

chapter 42|3 pages

John Dennis on Shakespeare's morals

1701

chapter 45|14 pages

George Farquhar on the Three Unities

1702

chapter 46|2 pages

John Downes, Shakespeare on the Restoration stage

1708

chapter 47|13 pages

Nicholas Rowe, Shakespeare's life and works

1709

chapter 48|13 pages

Sir Richard Steele, from the Tatler

1709–10

chapter 49|1 pages

Henry Felton on Shakespeare's genius

1709

chapter 50|47 pages

Charles Gildon, Shakespeare's life and works

1710

chapter 51|3 pages

The Earl of Shaftesbury on Shakespeare

1710

chapter 52|2 pages

Elijah Fenton on Shakespeare

January 17ii

chapter 53|2 pages

Joseph Trapp, Shakespeare and English drama

c. 1712

chapter 54|3 pages

Sir Richard Steele on Shakespeare

17ii

chapter 55|10 pages

Joseph Addison on Shakespeare

17ii-14

chapter 56|17 pages

John Dennis on Shakespeare's genius and morality

17ii

chapter 58|4 pages

John Hughes on Othello

1712

chapter 59|9 pages

Lewis Theobald on King Lear, Othello and Julius Caesar

1715–17

chapter 61|6 pages

Thomas Purney, Shakespeare and francophilia

1717

chapter 62|6 pages

Charles Gildon, Shakespeare and the Rules

1718

chapter 64|19 pages

John Dennis, from his adaptation ofCoriolanus

1719

chapter 65|4 pages

John Dennis, letters on Shakespeare

1719

chapter 66|14 pages

Lewis Theobald, from his adaptation of Richard II

1719

chapter 67|3 pages

John Dennis,Shakespeare and the Rules

1720

chapter 68|4 pages

Charles Gildon on Shakespeare's faults

1721

chapter 69|25 pages

Aaron Hill, from his adaptation of Henry V

1723

chapter 70|5 pages

The Duke of Wharton, In praise of Hill's Henry V

December 1723

chapter 71|16 pages

Alexander Pope, edition of Shakespeare

1725

chapter 72|5 pages

George Sewell on Shakespeare's poems

1725

chapter 73|3 pages

Richard Savage on The Rape of Lucrece

May 1725

chapter 74|17 pages

Lewis Theobald, from Shakespeare Restored

1726

chapter 75|5 pages

Nicholas Amhurst(?) on Cardinal Wolsey

November 1727

chapter |3 pages

George Adams, Shakespeare and tragedy

1729

chapter 78|6 pages

Lewis Theobald on editing Shakespeare

1729–30

chapter 79|5 pages

Thomas Cooke on the morality of Tate's King Lear

1731

chapter 80|2 pages

William Levin on the decline in theatrical taste

1731

chapter 82|54 pages

Lewis Theobald, edition of Shakespeare

1733

chapter 83|10 pages

William Warburton on Shakespeare

1733