Fiery Heart: The First Life of Leigh Hunt
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Description
Leigh Hunt is the forgotten giant of English Romanticism. The man Virginia Woolf called the ‘spiritual grandfather’ of the modern world was descended from black Caribbeans and grew up a child of the American and French revolutions. A poet and radical journalist, he threw off the shackles of the old order and campaigned tirelessly for Irish freedom and the abolition of slavery. Unwilling to see the Prince of Wales as an ‘Adonis of Loveliness’, Hunt was jailed for ‘diabolical libel’ that presented the prince as he was: a corpulent fifty-year-old, sodden with drink and drugs.Hunt was the centre of a charismatic generation. In prison, he drew the homage of Lord Byron, and soon afterwards discovered the Romantic geniuses Keats and Shelley. He was also a man riven by contradicitons, enjoying a controversial public role while battling with private demons. Hunt’s own poetry glows with the sexual frankness that characterised all his relationships, male and female.Written with flair and brilliant imaginative insight, and using a wealth of unpublished manuscript sources, Fiery Heart: The First Life of Leigh Hunt overturns existing accounts and presents a sparkling new portrait of Leigh Hunt and the English Romantics.
Additional information
Weight | 0.6 kg |
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Dimensions | 3.3 × 15.3 × 23.3 cm |
by | |
Format | Paperback |
Language | |
Pages | 448 |
Publisher | |
Year Published | 2005-1-20 |
Imprint | |
Publication City/Country | London, United Kingdom |
ISBN 10 | 0712602240 |
About The Author | Nicholas Roe is Professor of English at St Andrews University. He is the author of many books on Romanticism, including Wordsworth and Coleridge: The Radical Years (1990), John Keats and the Culture of Dissent (1998), and The Politics of Nature: William Wordsworth and Some Contemporaries (2002). |
Review Quote | Roe is an exceptionally shrewd critic of Romanticism – uncannily alert… everything he says is well-turned and reliably clever |
Other text | Roe provides as complete a portrait as we are likely to get of Hunt’s first 37 years |