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HISTORICAL EVENTS

TABULAR VIEW: 1837-1901

THE AGE OF VICTORIA (Continued)

CHARLES READE, 1814-1884. Peg Woffington,
1852; Cloister and the Hearth, 1861; Never
Too Late to Mend, 1856; Put Yourself in
His Place, 1870.
CHARLOTTE BRONTË, 1816-1855.

Jane Eyre,
1847; Shirley, 1849; Villette, 1853.
CHARLES KINGSLEY, 1819-1875. Yeast, 1848;
Alton Locke, 1850; Hypatia, 1853; Westward
Ho, 1855; Water Babies, 1863; Hereward
the Wake, 1866.

ELIZABETH GASKELL, 1810-1865. Mary Bar-
ton, 1848; Cranford, 1853; North and South,
1855.

GEORGE ELIOT, 1819-1880. Scenes of Clerical
Life, 1858; Adam Bede, 1859; Mill on the
Floss, 1860; Silas Marner, 1861; Romola,
1863; Middlemarch, 1872; Daniel Deronda,
1876. Poems: The Spanish Gypsy, etc.,

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TABULAR VIEW: 1837-1901

THE AGE OF VICTORIA (Concluded)

POETS

WILLIAM MORRIS, 1834-1896.
Defence of Guinevere,
1858; Jason, 1867; Earthly
Paradise, 1870; Poems by
the Way, 1891. Poetic
prose: House of the Wolf-
ings, 1889; Roots of the!
Mountains, 1890.
ALGERNON CHARLES SWIN-
BURNE, 1837-
Ata-

lanta in Calydon, 1865;

Poems and Ballads, 1866.

ESSAYISTS, ETC.

Marius the Epicu-
rean, 1885; Appre-
ciations, 1889;
Imaginary Por-
Platonism,
traits, 1887; Plato

and

1893.
ROBERT LOUIS STE-
VENSON, 1850-1
1894. An Inland
Voyage,
1878;
Travels with a
Donkey, 1879; Vir-
ginibus Puerisque,

1881; Familiar
Studies of Men
and Books, 1881.

NOVELISTS

A Pair of Blue Eyes, 1873; Far From the
Madding Crowd, 1874; The Return of the
Native, 1878; Tess of the D'Urbervilles,
1892; Jude the Obscure, 1896.

ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON, 1850-1894. New
Arabian Nights, 1882; Treasure Island, 1883;
Prince Otto, 1885; Kidnapped, 1886; Master
of Ballantrae, 1889; David Balfour, 1893;
Weir of Hermiston (posthumous). Poetry:
A Child's Garden of Verses, 1885; Under-
woods, 1887; Ballads, 1891.

CHAPTER XVI

A GLANCE IN REVIEW

Introduction. We have now followed the history of English literature from the prehistoric twilight of the race to our own day, a period of nearly fifteen hundred years. Let us take a hasty glance backward, and try to see the story of English letters in its broad features, as it unfolds itself with the centuries.

The Making of the Race and of the Language. The English are a mixed race, and English literature owes its remarkable scope to the fact that many different peoples and different branches of peoples have been mingled together to form the national character to which literature gives expression. The history of English literature is, during its early period, largely the history of the mingling together of these different peoples and tongues, to form a single nation and language, in which many diverse elements are held in solution. This period of preparation begins, perhaps as early as the fourth century, with the songs chanted by pagan Saxons in their early home upon the German Sea, and ends with Chaucer, the first great writer in whom we feel the modern spirit, and whose language is near enough to our own to be read by modern men with only a small amount of preparatory training. If we neglect the earliest scraps of song which scholars have ventured to assign to a remoter antiquity, and date the true beginning of Anglo-Saxon poetry from the middle or end of the sixth century, when the great epic of Beowulf probably arose, we still have a period of nearly eight centuries during which the nation and the language were being formed.

The earliest historic inhabitants of Britain were of the Celtic race; but the basis of the English race and language was furnished, not by the Celts, but by the Anglo-Saxons, who

invaded and possessed Britain during the fifth and sixth centuries. They mingled, to some degree, with the conquered Celts, and absorbed a small portion of the Celtic tongue, together with some words left behind by the Roman occupation. Toward the end of the eighth century, and during the ninth, England was overrun by the Danes and the Northmen, men of allied race to the Anglo-Saxons, but sufficiently different to contribute some new ingredients to the national character. In 1066, the country was conquered by the Norman-French, who had originally been Teutonic, like the Anglo-Saxons and Danes, but who had become by intermarriage half French in blood, and were wholly so in civilization. Thus a second and far greater infusion of Celtic characteristics was made in the already blended English character. For a period of three hundred years the process of amalgamating the natives and the conquerors went on; by the time of Chaucer it was virtually completed.

Old and Middle English Literature.-The literature of these eight centuries divides itself into two parts; first, that produced before the Norman Conquest, and written in Anglo-Saxon, or Old English; second, that which began to be produced at the beginning of the thirteenth century, in Middle English, a tongue recognizably like our own, and becoming gradually more so as it absorbed French ingredients. Old English literature, in turn, divides itself into two parts; first, the early pagan poetry of which Beowulf is the chief monument; second, the Christianized literature of Northumbria and Wessex, of which Cadmon, Cynewulf, and King Alfred are the chief figures. Middle English literature, likewise, includes two periods; first, the pre-Chaucerian period, during which the metrical romance was the great staple of production; second, the period of Chaucer and his followers. During this latter period literature was greatly widened, both in form and matter. The verse tale was the most vital form which it took; but the lyric (especially the elaborate French lyric) was cultivated, the popular ballad flourished, and the miracle play took its rise.

The Renaissance and the Reformation.-During the fifteenth century the wave of creative impulse which had risen

so high in Chaucer, ebbed away, chiefly because of the disturbed state of the country. But in the sixteenth century the life of England began again to be stirred by two great impulses. One of these was a literary and artistic influence, which came from Italy, and which we call the Renaissance. The other was a moral and religious influence, which came from Germany, and which we know as the Reformation. Under this double stimulus, aided later by the excitement of great geographical discoveries, the growth of commerce, and the national enthusiasm aroused by England's struggle with Spain, literature was again quickened. During the first quarter of the sixteenth century the wave of creative literature began to rise; and it continued to rise more and more rapidly until it reached its climax in the latter part of the reign of Elizabeth and in the reign of James I. It then ebbed rapidly away; but the great Puritan writers, Milton and Bunyan, continued on into a later age the double impulse of the Renaissance and of the Reformation.

Three Stages of the Renaissance Period.-We may profitably consider this period as divided into three stages. The first stage is represented by Sir Thomas More, by the translators of the second great English version of the Bible,* Tyndale and Coverdale, and by the courtly figures of Wyatt and Surrey, who brought the Renaissance influence into English poetry. This first stage of the new era also saw the rise of early English comedy and tragedy, developed out of the miracle plays and moralities, and given definite form by the influence of the Latin drama.

The second stage represents the high tide of Elizabethan literature. Its greatest figures are Sidney, Spenser, Marlowe, Shakespeare, Ben Jonson, and Bacon; and grouped around them we find a great crowd of poets, romancers, and playwrights. A wonderful efflorescence of the human mind, a wonderful energy and gayety in human life, mark the last years of Elizabeth and the first years of James I.

The third stage is marked by the over-ripeness and decline of the drama, and the growing sternness of the Puri

*The first was Wyclif, whose age was marked by a movement somewhat similar to that of the Reformation.

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