The Spirit of the Age; Or, Contemporary Portraits


Lu par LibriVox Volunteers

(4 stars; 1 reviews)

William Hazlitt was a keen observer of his time and the people populating the literary landscape. He presents short monographs on such illustrious persons as Jeremy Bentham, known for his philosophy of utility, William Godwin, who raised the standard of morality above the reach of humanity, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Edward Irving, who keeps the public in awe by insulting all their favourite idols, Horne Tooke, Sir Walter Scott, Lord Byron, Thomas Campbell, who wrote Pleasures of Hope,James Mackintosh, appointed Recorder (chief judge) of Bombay in 1804, William Wordsworth, Thomas Malthus, who wrote in answer to Mr. Godwin, William Gifford , who edited The Quarterly Review, Francis Jeffrey, who edited the Edinburgh Review, Henry Brougham, who founded the Edinburgh Review in 1802, Francis Burdett, one of the most pleasing speakers in the House, and is a prodigious favourite of the English people, William Wilberforce, whose first object and principle of action is to do what he thinks right, Robert Southey, the best and most natural prose-writer of any poet of the day, Thomas Moore, who wrote Fables for the Holy Alliance, and Leigh Hunt, we will venture to oppose his Third Canto of the Story of Rimini for classic elegance and natural feeling to any equal number of lines from Mr. Southey's Epics or from Mr. Moore's Lalla Rookh. Charles Lamb wrote Essays of Elia under his pseudonym Elia and Washington Irvine wrote under the pseudonym Geoffrey Crayon. Hazlitt compares the two in his final essay. - Summary by Craig Campbell (9 hr 4 min)

Chapitres

Jeremy Bentham 41:23 Lu par Craig Campbell
William Godwin 40:57 Lu par Daniel Davison
Samuel Taylor Coleridge 29:50 Lu par Kazbek
Edward Irving 28:09 Lu par Shreya Sethi
Horne Tooke 34:45 Lu par Garfield Dsouza
Walter Scott 36:12 Lu par Steven Watson
Lord Byron 31:38 Lu par Rolv Robole
Thomas Campbell and George Crabb 33:10 Lu par jenno
James Mackintosh 23:14 Lu par Kat Andrews
William Wordsworth 28:56 Lu par Garfield Dsouza
Thomas Malthus 35:54 Lu par Daniel Davison
William Gifford 37:37 Lu par jenno
Francis Jeffrey 29:19 Lu par Craig Campbell
Henry Brougham and Francis Burdett 21:51 Lu par weezer
John Scott, 1st Earl of Eldon and William Wilberforce 23:33 Lu par Jesse Zuba
Robert Southey 24:52 Lu par Rolv Robole
Thomas Moore and Leigh Hunt 21:42 Lu par Arden
Elia (Charles Lamb)—Geoffrey Crayon (Washington Irving) 18:35 Lu par weezer
James Sheridan Knowles 3:13 Lu par Garfield Dsouza

Critiques

like a readers digest of writers and political leaders


(4 stars)

The summaries were very concise and detailed. As for accuracy one must take it at face value. Mr Hazlitt has given a worthy account of his subjects and is worth listening to and reading