The Westminster Review
Founded in 1823 by Jeremy Bentham, the Westminster Review continued publication until 1914, becoming one of nineteenth-century Britain's great literary reviews.
Founded in 1823 by Jeremy Bentham, the Westminster Review continued publication until 1914, becoming one of nineteenth-century Britain's great literary reviews.
Not a formally adopted daughter of Samuel Richardson, but a close correspondent. She married John Scudamore of Kentchurch, Herefordshire.
The works of novelist, poet, and conduct book author Jane West (1758-1832), including the novel A Gossip's Story (1796), tended toward conservative didacticism.
Jacobean dramatist and contemporary of Shakespeare. Webster's tragedies The White Devil and The Duchess of Malfi are regarded as the principal plays of the seventeenth century, aside from those of Shakespeare.
Pseudonym of Leonhard Wächter. See Wächter.
Clergyman, theologian, and poet, Watts was interested in the application of Lockean theories of sensation to theological questions. His hymns, the genre for which he is best known, established the form for subsequent generations.
Project editor.
Also a poet and critic, Thomas Warton, brother to Joseph Warton, is best remembered as a literary historian, particularly for The History of English Poetry, from the Close of the Eleventh to the Commencement of the Eighteenth Century (1774-1781). His poem The Triumph of Isis: A Poem. Occasioned by Isis: An Elegy appeared in 1750. Warton's sister Jane appears to have been a critic as well, assisting him with some of his work.
Poet, critic, literary editor, and brother to Thomas Warton. His major poetic works include Fashion: An Epistolary Satire to a Friend (1742), The Enthusiast; or, the Lover of Nature (1744), Odes on Various Subjects (1746), Ranelagh House: A Satire (1747), and An Ode, Occasioned by Reading Mr. West's Translation of Pindar (1749). An Essay on the Writings and Genius of Pope was published in 1756, then revised as An Essay on the Genius and Writings of Pope (1762), with additional revised editions thereafter.
William Warner is best remembered for his verse chronicle entitled Albion's England and his romance novel Pan, His Syrinx, both drawing on British history and Elizabethan England.