Bacchus in Romantic England
eBook - PDF

Bacchus in Romantic England

Writers and Drink 1780-1830

  1. English
  2. PDF
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

Bacchus in Romantic England

Writers and Drink 1780-1830

About this book

Bacchus in Romantic England describes real drunkenness among writers and ordinary people in the Romantic age. It grounds this 'reality' in writings by doctors and philanthropists from 1780 onwards, who describe an epidemic of drunkenness. These commentators provide a context for the different ways that poets and novelists of the age represent drunkards. Wordsworth writes poems and essays evaluating the drunken career of his model Robert Burns. Charles Lamb's essays and letters reveal a real and metaphorical preoccupation with his own drinking as a way of disguising his personal suffering; his companion Coleridge writes drinking songs, essays about drunkenness, and meditations about his own weakness of will that show both festive inebriety and consciousness of an inward abyss; Coleridge's son Hartley, whose fate his father had prophesied, experiences drunkenness as the life-long humiliation described in his poems and letters. Keats's complex dionysianism runs through 'Endymion' and the late odes, setting him at odds with his temperate hero Milton. Men in the Romantic age, such as Sheridan, Byron, Moor, and Clare, celebrate rowdy friendship with tales and songs of drinking; Romantic women novelists such as Smith, Edgeworth and Wollstonecraft depict these men stumbling home to abuse their wives. Although excessive drinking is real in the period, observers and participants can still maintain ambivalence about its power to release or to debase the human being.

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Yes, you can access Bacchus in Romantic England by A. Taylor in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & European Literary Criticism. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. List of Plates
  7. Acknowledgements
  8. Abbreviations
  9. Introduction
  10. 1 Dionysian Myths and Alcoholic Realities
  11. 2 Romantic Homage to the Dionysian Burns: Wordsworth and Others
  12. 3 Fragmented Persons: Charles Lamb, John Woodvil and 'Confessions of a Drunkard'
  13. 4 Coleridge and Alcohol: Songs and Centrifuges
  14. 5 In the Cave of the Gnome: Hartley Coleridge
  15. 6 'Joy's Grape': Keats, Comus, and Paradise Lost IX
  16. 7 Bacchus Contra Venus: Alcoholic Husbands and Their Wives
  17. Notes
  18. Index