ABSTRACT

William Hazlitt is viewed by many as one of the most distinguished of the non-fiction prose writers to emerge from the Romantic period. This nine-volume edition collects all his major works in complete form.

part

Uncollected Essays

chapter |6 pages

To The Monthly Reviewers

(c. 1804, edited from MS)

chapter |9 pages

On The Punishment of Death

(c. 1812, edited from MS)

chapter |5 pages

On The Punishment of Death

(edited from Fraser’s Magazine, 1831)

chapter |3 pages

On the Question whether Pope was a Poet

chapter |4 pages

On the Opera

chapter |15 pages

Guy Faux

chapter |14 pages

The Fight

chapter |20 pages

On the Elgin Marbles The Ilissus

chapter |15 pages

My First Acquaintance with Poets

chapter |4 pages

Judging of Pictures

chapter |10 pages

Merry England

chapter |10 pages

On the Feeling of Immortality in Youth

chapter |11 pages

On Reading New Books

chapter |8 pages

On a Sun-Dial

chapter |14 pages

The Main-Chance

chapter |2 pages

Byron and Wordsworth

chapter |9 pages

On Cant and Hypocrisy

A Fragment

chapter |3 pages

Memorabilia of Mr Coleridge

chapter |6 pages

The Free Admission

chapter |6 pages

The Sick-Chamber

chapter |6 pages

The Letter-Bell