Author Archives: BSL
James Thomson
James Thomson (1700-1748) was perhaps the eighteenth-century author most responsible for the tradition we now think of as “nature poetry” in British literature. His long poems, particularly The Seasons and The Castle of Indolence had an incalculable influence on the … Continue reading
Thomas Gray
Thomas Gray is another forerunners of the Romantic movement in British literature. Although much of his poetry fits well into the conventions of 18th-century English verse, his sense of specific places, his emphasis on the picturesque, his naturalistic observations, and … Continue reading
Christopher Smart
Christopher Smart (a.k.a. Jack, Kit and Kitty Smart) was a legendary “mad” poet, although his madness was the highly suspect result of tensions within his family, between Smart and his father-in-law, a jealous publisher who imprisoned Smart in an asylum … Continue reading
Thomas Warton (1728-90)
Five years the Poet Laureate of England (1785-90), Thomas Warton was one of those 19th century authors who contributed to the rise of the Gothic element in English literature while also being one of the first great literary historians in … Continue reading
William Cowper
William Cowper (1731-1800) and his poetry were important parts of the emerging discourse of British nature writing. He is a key transitional figure, whose conventional piety–“God made the country, and man made the town” (The Task, I, l. 749)–is frequently … Continue reading
Anna Laetitia Barbauld
Anna [Aiken] Barbauld letter (Dickinson College Special Collections) Jennifer Lindbeck, Class of ’98, Dickinson College Anna Laetitia Aikin Barbauld (1743-1825) was born on June 20, 1743, in Leicestershire, England, the eldest daughter of John Aikin, a Dissenting clergyman and … Continue reading
Charlotte Smith (1749-1806) Emily Arndt, Class of ’13, Dickinson College, and Ashton Nichols, Department of English Like Cowper and Clare, Charlotte Smith elevated the ordinary details of the natural world into suitable subjects for poetry. She also helped to establish … Continue reading
William Blake
William Blake is a particularly complex figure in terms of a romantic natural history. On the one hand, Blake was hostile to “vegetable” nature in all its forms. He saw the natural world as a sign of our “fallen” condition, … Continue reading
Robert Burns (1759-96) Robert Burns summed up his attitude toward human beings by announcing that he was “truly sorry man’s dominion / Has broken nature’s social union” (“To a Mouse, on Turning Up Her Nest with the Plough, November, 1785”). His … Continue reading
Ann Radcliffe (1764-1823) Emily Arndt, Class of ’13, Dickinson College Influenced by Gothic and Romantic elements of Charlotte Smith’s writing, Ann Radcliffe furthered the literary link between the natural and supernatural worlds in her novels. Her six novels: The Castles … Continue reading