William Hazlitt (1778-1830) was an English essayist, journalist, literary critic, and philosopher. He was born in Kent, England but his family was forced to relocate to Ireland due to their support for the American Revolution. Hazlitt received his education in England and hoped to become a painter, but was compelled to return from Paris due to war. He befriended Coleridge and Wordsworth and began his career as a prolific writer, producing works on philosophy, art, literature and politics. Throughout his life he contributed essays, criticism and commentary to various publications while struggling with personal difficulties including a failed marriage.
William Hazlitt (1778-1830) was an English essayist, journalist, literary critic, and philosopher. He was born in Kent, England but his family was forced to relocate to Ireland due to their support for the American Revolution. Hazlitt received his education in England and hoped to become a painter, but was compelled to return from Paris due to war. He befriended Coleridge and Wordsworth and began his career as a prolific writer, producing works on philosophy, art, literature and politics. Throughout his life he contributed essays, criticism and commentary to various publications while struggling with personal difficulties including a failed marriage.
William Hazlitt (1778-1830) was an English essayist, journalist, literary critic, and philosopher. He was born in Kent, England but his family was forced to relocate to Ireland due to their support for the American Revolution. Hazlitt received his education in England and hoped to become a painter, but was compelled to return from Paris due to war. He befriended Coleridge and Wordsworth and began his career as a prolific writer, producing works on philosophy, art, literature and politics. Throughout his life he contributed essays, criticism and commentary to various publications while struggling with personal difficulties including a failed marriage.
William Hazlitt (1778-1830) was an English essayist, journalist, literary critic, and philosopher. He was born in Kent, England but his family was forced to relocate to Ireland due to their support for the American Revolution. Hazlitt received his education in England and hoped to become a painter, but was compelled to return from Paris due to war. He befriended Coleridge and Wordsworth and began his career as a prolific writer, producing works on philosophy, art, literature and politics. Throughout his life he contributed essays, criticism and commentary to various publications while struggling with personal difficulties including a failed marriage.
• Born in Maidstone, Kent, England in 1778 • Mother: Grace Loftus • Father: Reverent William Hazlitt (Irish Unitarian minister) • His family was forced to leave Kent and live in Ireland b’coz of their support for the ‘American Revolution’ • 1787: returned to England & settle at Wem in Shropshire. • Educated at the Unitarian New College at Hackney, but left 2 years later because he did not want to become a Unitarian minister • 1802: traveled to Paris to become a painter & to work in the Louvre, though war between England and France compelled his return the following year. • Through his father became friends with Coleridge and Wordsworth, under their influence that he developed as a writer. • In London his friend Charles Lamb introduced him to Godwin and other literary figures and he began a long career as a prolific critic, journalist, essayist and lecturer • 1805: wrote his first book A Study of the Principles of Human Action • Strongly supported the French Revolution • Admired Napoleon indiscriminately • 1806: wrote a political pamphlet, Free Thoughts on Public Affairs • 1808: married Sara Stoddart, a friend of Mary Lamb & John Stoddart’s sister and settled in London • He then left philosophy for literature and journalism • 1812: Became a theatre critic for The Morning Chronicle • 1820: living apart from his wife, became passionately involved with his landlord’s daughter. This attachment brought him close to insanity • After divorcing his wife in Scotland, he returned to London to discover that the young lady had transferred her affection to another man • wrote Characteristics: In the Manner of Rochefoucault's Maxims (1823) - imitation of La Rochefoucauld Works 1. The Round Table (1817) • Full Title: The Round Table: A Collection of Essays on Literature, Men, and Manners • Series of essays wrote jointly with William Hazlitt • Published in 2 volumes in The Examiner • 51 essays = 40 by Hazlitt (art, literature & theatre) + 12 by Hunt (on ordinary subject) 2. Characters of Shakespeare’s Play (1817) • Book of criticism of Shakespeare’s play • Established him as a Shakespearean critic second only to Coleridge • Dedicated to: Lamb • Admired by Keats • A Preface establishes his main theme of the uniqueness of Shakespeare's characters and looks back at earlier Shakespearean criticism • Two concluding chapters on "Doubtful Plays of Shakespear" and the "Poems and Sonnets" round out the book. • His main focus is on the characters that appear in the plays, but he also comments on the plays' dramatic structure and poetry • Preface > Cymbeline > Coriolanus > Falstaff > Hamlet > King Lear > Macbeth > The Merchant of Venice > Othello > The Tempest >Twelfth Night; Or, What You Will > As You Like It > Measure for Measure > Tragedies > Histories > Comedies 3. Lectures on the English Poets (1818) 4. Lectures on the English Comic Writers (1819) 5. Table Talk (181-22) • A collection of essays originally published in two volumes • Deals with the topic of art, literature & philosophy • Made a spiteful attack on Shelley • On the Pleasure of Painting - 1st essay - Intended to be a reflection on the life of Hazzlitt’s father, who died in 1820 - It grew into an account of Hazlitt view on the nature of art and the mental satisfaction to be derived satisfaction to be derived from painting • The Indian Jugglers - “No man is truly great, who is great only in his lifetime. The test of greatness is the page of history. Nothing can be said to be great that has a distinct limit, or that borders on something evidently greater than itself. Besides, what is short-lived and pampered into mere notoriety, is of a gross and vulgar quality in itself.” 6. On Milton’s Sonnets (1822) 7. Liber Amoris, or, The New Pygmalion (1823) • Published anonymously • transparent description of his affair with landlord’s daughter (fell in love with the daughter of his London landlord, but the affair ended disastrously) 8. My First Acquaintance with Poets (1823) • Talked about his meeting with Coleridge and Wordsworth • Coleridge is the only person I have ever knew, who answer to the idea of man of genius • “Wordsworth has eyes to see nature” - Describe him as Don-Quixote like • After reading Lyrical ballad - “the sense of new style and new spirit in poetry came to me.” 9. The Plain Speaker (1826) 10. Sketches of the Principal Picture Galleries in England (1824) 11. The Spirit of the Age (1825) • Essays on the work and personalities of Hazlitt’s contemporaries • Included sketches of 25 men presented as seen in daily life • Contains his mature and balanced criticism of Godwin, Coleridge, Wordsworth, Byron, Lamb, Bentham and Scott • Also included Malthus - who wrote the controversial “Essay on the Principle of Population”, which argued that population will outrun food supply • “The present is an age of talkers, and not of doers; and the reason is that the world is growing old”