000 01998cam a2200157ua 4500
082 _a821.009
_bJOH/L.2
100 0 _aJohnson, Samuel
245 1 0 _aLives of the English poets
260 _aNew Delhi
_bAtlantic Publishers
_c1991
300 _a472p.
500 _aVolume II Includes index. With an introduction by R. K. Mathur
520 _aPoet, dramatic, novelist, essayist, critic, biographer and lexicographer, Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-84) was the literary dictator of the 18th century. His Magnum opus, Lives of the English Poets, is such a work as posterity will not willingly let die. Though written more than 200 years ago (1777-81), the Lives has lost neither its charm for the general reader of the present age nor its relevance to modern criticism. The narratives, the biographical part of the Lives, pleasantly written in a conversational style, full of anecdotes, wise observations, and life-like portraits of characters, are a perennial source of delight to the reader. As short biographies, they are unrivalled. If the biographical section attracts the general reader, the critical section draws the attention of the students of literary history and criticism. To the student of literary history, the Lives gives an authentic account of 18th century literature and culture, or rather of the neo-classical age, of the period of a hundred years or so that followed the restoration of Monarchy in 1660. It deals with the budding, blooming and decay of neo-classicism. It begins with the "Life of Cowly" containing Johnson's famous denunciation of metaphysical poetry which serves as a background against which he projects the achievement of the neo-classical age. It is indispensable for understanding the critical standards of the 18th century in general and Johnson in particular, for he wrote no formal critical treatise but only a few periodical essays discussing his theoretical position...
650 _aPoetry-English literature
650 0 _aEnglish poets
942 _cBK
999 _c15293
_d15293