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.

chapter |28 pages

Introduction

part |14 pages

The Early Days

chapter 1|1 pages

John Clare apologizes

?1818

chapter 2|1 pages

John Clare addresses the public

1818

chapter 3|1 pages

John Clare on his hopes of success

1818

chapter 5|2 pages

Words of Warning

1820

part |77 pages

Poems Descriptive of Rural Life and Scenery

chapter 7|11 pages

Introduction to Poems Descriptive

chapter 8|2 pages

From an unsigned review, New Times

21 January 1820

chapter 10|3 pages

Tributes in verse

1820, 1821

chapter 11|5 pages

Advice on alterations and omissions

Trouble with the native 1820

chapter 14|5 pages

From an unsigned review, New Monthly Magazine

March 1820, xiii, 326–30

chapter 15|3 pages

From an unsigned review, Monthly Review

March 1820, xci, 296–300

chapter 16|2 pages

Unsigned notice, Monthly Magazine

March 1820, xlix, 164

chapter 17|3 pages

John Scott, from an unsigned review, London Magazine

March 1820, i, 323–8

chapter 18|3 pages

John Clare and the Morning Post

1820

chapter 20|1 pages

An enquirer after Clare's welfare

1820

chapter 21|1 pages

Eliza Emmerson on critical reactions

1820

chapter 23|5 pages

From an unsigned review, Eclectic Review

April 1820, n.s. xiii, 327–40

chapter 25|6 pages

From an unsigned review, Quarterly

May 1820, xxiii, 166–74

chapter 26|2 pages

Unsigned article, Guardian

28 May 1820, i

chapter 27|1 pages

J.G.Lockhart on Clare, Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine

June 1820, vii, 322

chapter 28|2 pages

From an unsigned review, British Critic

June 1820, n.s. xiii, 662–7

chapter 29|2 pages

From an unsigned review, Antijacobin Review

June 1820, lviii, 348–53

chapter 31|1 pages

An admirer comments on Clare's poetry

1820

chapter 32|1 pages

Eliza Emmerson on reactions in Bristol

1820

chapter 33|1 pages

Edward Drury on the poems people like

[1820]

chapter 34|6 pages

Clare and ‘Native Genius'

1821

chapter 35|3 pages

Some brief comments on Clare

1821

part |16 pages

The Period Prior to Publication of the Village Minstrel: Incidental Comments

chapter 36|2 pages

Some opinions on ‘Solitude'

1820

chapter 37|1 pages

John Taylor on narrative poetry

1820

chapter 38|1 pages

Edward Drury with some good advice

1820

chapter 39|1 pages

John Taylor on the next volume

1820

chapter 40|1 pages

Edward Drury on the songs

1820

chapter 42|1 pages

John Clare on the judgments of others

1820, 1821

chapter 43|2 pages

More advice from Eliza Emmerson

1820

chapter 44|1 pages

John Clare on one of his poems

1820

chapter 45|1 pages

John Taylor on Clare's good taste

1820

chapter 46|1 pages

John Taylxor on true poetry

1821

chapter 47|1 pages

Edward Drury on ‘The Last of Autumn'

1821

chapter 48|1 pages

Some opinions on ‘The Peasant Boy'

1821

chapter 49|1 pages

John Taylor on the prospects of success

1821

chapter 50|1 pages

Comments on ‘prettiness' in poetry

1821

chapter 51|1 pages

Comments in anticipation of the new volume

1821

part |51 pages

The Village Minstrel

chapter 53|1 pages

John Clare on popularity

1821

chapter 54|4 pages

From an unsigned review, Literary Gazette

6 October 1821, No. 246, 625–8

chapter 55|5 pages

Two views of Clare, Literary Chronicle

1821

chapter 56|7 pages

From an unsigned review, Monthly Magazine

November 1821, lii, 321–5

chapter 57|8 pages

John Taylor on Clare, London Magazine

1821

chapter 58|2 pages

From an unsigned review, European Magazine

November 1821, lxxx, 453–8

chapter 59|1 pages

Unsigned review, New Monthly Magazine

November 1821, iii, 579

chapter 60|4 pages

From an unsigned review, Eclectic Review

January 1822, n.s. xvii, 31–45

chapter 61|1 pages

C.H. Townsend on The Village Minstrel

1822

chapter 62|1 pages

John Clare on the disappointing response

1822

chapter 63|1 pages

. An admirer on The Village Minstrel

1822

chapter 64|1 pages

Charles Lamb on the ‘true rustic style'

1822

chapter 65|6 pages

The Rev. W. Allen on Clare

1823

chapter 66|1 pages

John Clare on the neglect of true genius

1824

part |13 pages

The Period Prior to Publication of The Shepherd's Calendar: Incidental Comments

chapter 70|1 pages

John Clare on inspiration and isolation

1822

chapter 71|1 pages

John Taylor on the need to avoid vulgarity

1822

chapter 72|2 pages

Some comments on ‘The Parish'

1823

chapter 74|2 pages

James Hessey on The Shepherd's Calendar

1823, 1824

chapter 75|1 pages

H.F. Cary on The Shepherd's Calendar

1824

chapter 76|1 pages

John Taylor on The Shepherd's Calendar

1825, 1826

chapter 77|1 pages

A ‘chorus of praise' for Clare

1826

chapter 78|1 pages

Eliza Emmerson on Clare

1826

part |11 pages

The Shepherd's Calendar

chapter 80|1 pages

Unsigned notice, Literary Gazette

31 March 1827, no. 532, 195

chapter 81|4 pages

Josiah Conder, unsigned review, Eclectic Review

June 1827, n.s. xxvii, 509–21

chapter 82|2 pages

Unsigned notice, London Weekly Review

9 June 1827, i, 7

chapter 83|3 pages

Unsigned review, Literary Chronicle

27 October 1827, no. 441, 674–5

part |9 pages

The Period Prior to Publication of the Rural Muse: Incidental Comments

chapter 84|1 pages

Some comments on ‘Autumn' and ‘Summer Images'

1828, 1829, 1830, 1831

chapter 85|1 pages

Thomas Pringle on Clare and fashion

1828

chapter 87|1 pages

Derwent Coleridge on Clare

1831

chapter 88|1 pages

Some practical advice

1831

chapter 90|1 pages

Thomas Crossley, a sonnet to Clare

1831

chapter 91|1 pages

John Clare on ambition and independence

1832

chapter 92|2 pages

Two reactions to ‘The Nightingale's Nest'

1832, 1833

part |25 pages

The Rural Muse

chapter 93|1 pages

John Clare, the Preface to The Rural Muse

9 May 1835

chapter 94|2 pages

Unsigned notice, Athenaeum

25 July 1835, no. 404, 566–7

chapter 95|2 pages

Unsigned notice, Literary Gazette

25 July 1835, no. 966, 465–6

chapter 96|13 pages

John Wilson, unsigned review, Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine

July 1835, xxxviii, 231–47

chapter 97|1 pages

Two readers on The Rural Muse

1835

chapter 98|1 pages

Unsigned notice, New Monthly Magazine

August 1835, xliv, 510

chapter 99|5 pages

Unsigned review, Druids' Monthly Magazine

1835, n.s. ii, 131–4

part |26 pages

The Asylum Years

chapter 100|2 pages

Thomas De Quincey on Clare

1840

chapter 101|10 pages

Cyrus Redding visits John Clare

1841

chapter 102|9 pages

Edwin Paxton Hood on Clare

1851

chapter 103|1 pages

A biographical sketch of Clare

1856

chapter 104|1 pages

Clare in passing

1857

chapter 105|3 pages

John Plummer on a forgotten poet

1861

part |27 pages

Obituaries and Lives

chapter 106|2 pages

John Askham on Clare

1863, 1864

chapter 107|1 pages

John Dalby, a poem on Clare

1864

chapter 108|1 pages

John Plummer, again, on Clare

1864

chapter 109|7 pages

Spencer T. Hall on Clare and Bloomfield

1866

chapter 110|3 pages

A female audience for John Clare

1867

chapter III|2 pages

An American view of a peasant poet

1869

chapter 112|2 pages

The doomed poet

1873

chapter 114|6 pages

Clare and the soul of the people

1873, 1884

part |22 pages

The Period 1874–1920

chapter 115|1 pages

Some late nineteenth-century views of Clare

1887, 1893, 1897

chapter 116|2 pages

Norman Gale, a rhapsodic view

1901

chapter 117|8 pages

Arthur Symons on Clare

1908

chapter 119|1 pages

Clare as a poet of greatness

1910

chapter 120|9 pages

Edward Thomas on Clare

1906, 1910, 1917

part |62 pages

The Period 1920–35

chapter 121|2 pages

Alan Porter, a violent view

1920

chapter 122|1 pages

Samuel Looker on Clare's genius

1920

chapter 123|2 pages

J.C. Squire, with reservations

1921

chapter 124|4 pages

H.J. Massingham on Clare's uniqueness

1921

chapter 126|3 pages

Robert Lynd on Clare and Mr Hudson

1921

chapter 127|3 pages

Edmund Gosse, a dissentient view

1921

chapter 128|3 pages

Clare and Keats

1921

chapter 129|8 pages

Maurice Hewlett on Clare's derivations

1921

chapter 132|5 pages

Alan Porter on a book of the moment

1924

chapter 133|3 pages

Percy Lubbock, a hesitant view

1924

chapter 134|4 pages

Edmund Gosse, again

1924

chapter 135|6 pages

Edmund Blunden on Clare

1929, 1931

part |62 pages

The Period 1935–64

chapter 136|2 pages

Clare's dream

1935

chapter 137|3 pages

John Speirs on Clare's limitations

1935

chapter 138|1 pages

H.J. Massingham on the labourer poets

1942

chapter 139|16 pages

W.K.Richmond on Clare

1947

chapter 140|9 pages

Geoffrey Grigson on Clare

1950

chapter 141|3 pages

Robert Graves on Clare as a true poet

1955

chapter 142|5 pages

Clare as an intruder into the canon

1956

chapter 143|4 pages

Clare as a lyric poet

1956

chapter 144|3 pages

More doubts about Clare

1958

chapter 145|11 pages

Harold Bloom on Clare

1962

chapter 146|5 pages

Some centenary comments

1964