Augustan Studies
By (Author) Geoffrey Tillotson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
7th November 2013
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: poetry and poets
821.509
Hardback
266
316g
It is still true that most readers of eighteenth-century poetry approach it by way of nineteenth-century poetry; they know what Wordsworth said about Pope before they read Pope. This means that when they read Pope and other eighteenth-century poets, they apply the wrong criteria. An eighteenth-century poet did not have to create the taste by which he was enjoyed to the same extent as a nineteenth-century poet was conscious of having to. The kinds were ready waiting for him, and, if the rules of poetic diction for the kinds of which he elected to write were properly complied with, the products were recognisable: epic, tragedy in verse, Pindaric, elegy, heroic and familiar epistle, pastoral, georgic, occasional verse, translation and imitation. This book, a collection of essays by Dr Tillotson, examines these types of eighteenth-century poetry with particular focus on poetic diction, as well as discussing works such as Popes letters and Johnsons dictionary.
Geoffrey Tillotson holds the Chair of English Literature at Birkbeck College, University of London.