• Thumbnail for Thomas Warton
    Thomas Warton (9 January 1728 – 21 May 1790) was an English literary historian, critic, and poet. He was appointed Poet Laureate in 1785, following the...
    9 KB (977 words) - 07:17, 12 July 2024
  • Thomas Warton, the elder (c. 1688 – 10 September 1745), was an English clergyman and schoolmaster, known as the second professor of poetry at Oxford,...
    4 KB (471 words) - 05:55, 16 August 2023
  • Thumbnail for Laureate
    Tate; Nicholas Rowe; Laurence Eusden; Colley Cibber; William Whitehead; Thomas Warton; Henry James Pye; Robert Southey; William Wordsworth; Alfred Tennyson;...
    7 KB (833 words) - 15:46, 9 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Terry Eagleton
    His thinking is influenced by Marxism and Christianity. Formerly the Thomas Warton Professor of English Literature at the University of Oxford (1992–2001)...
    34 KB (3,593 words) - 05:17, 7 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Thomas Wyatt (poet)
    have varied widely regarding Wyatt's work. Eighteenth-century critic Thomas Warton considered Wyatt "confessedly an inferior" to his contemporary Henry...
    27 KB (3,265 words) - 16:49, 11 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Thomas Percy (bishop of Dromore)
    translated and "improved." Percy was a friend of Samuel Johnson, Joseph and Thomas Warton, and James Boswell. In 1764, Dr Johnson and others encouraged Percy...
    11 KB (1,420 words) - 09:13, 26 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Joseph Warton
    Reverend Thomas Warton, became vicar of Basingstoke. A few years later in Basingstoke, Joseph's sister Jane, also a writer, and his younger brother, Thomas Warton...
    4 KB (404 words) - 23:02, 28 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for The History of English Poetry
    Eleventh to the Commencement of the Eighteenth Century (1774-1781) by Thomas Warton was a pioneering and influential literary history. Only three full volumes...
    14 KB (1,602 words) - 13:57, 19 August 2024
  • as Robert Warton, (died 1557), English Benedictine abbot Thomas Warton (1728–1790) English literary historian and Poet Laureate Thomas Warton the elder...
    719 bytes (131 words) - 00:09, 3 March 2019
  • Thumbnail for Romantic literature
    century, including figures such as Joseph Warton (headmaster at Winchester College) and his brother Thomas Warton, Professor of Poetry at Oxford University...
    51 KB (6,424 words) - 08:54, 25 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom
    London Gazette (Supplement). 26 April 1785. p. 205. Reid, Hugh (2006). "Warton, Thomas (1728–1790)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.)....
    23 KB (1,868 words) - 06:24, 5 October 2024
  • 1927–2005), Scottish soccer referee Thomas Warton the elder (c. 1688–1745), English clergyman, schoolmaster and poet Thomas Warton (the younger) (1728–1790), English...
    1 KB (173 words) - 21:08, 29 November 2019
  • Thumbnail for Thomas Chatterton
    year's edition recognises that they were probably Chatterton's own work. Thomas Warton, in his History of English Poetry (1778) included Rowley among 15th-century...
    35 KB (4,556 words) - 07:07, 6 September 2024
  • Recurrence". www.cancernetwork.com. Retrieved 2017-12-18. Williams, Jake Thomas Warton; Pearce, Alison; Smith, Allan 'Ben' (August 2021). "A systematic review...
    5 KB (508 words) - 10:28, 30 July 2024
  • Oxford, the sonnet form was being revived by the group of poets about Thomas Warton, with which it has been argued that he was associated. The fourteen...
    11 KB (1,434 words) - 08:07, 27 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Gilbert White
    Gilbert White was educated in Basingstoke by Thomas Warton, father of Joseph Warton and Thomas Warton, who would have been Gilbert's school fellows....
    21 KB (2,572 words) - 01:57, 29 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Elizabethan literature
    interest in Elizabethan poetry was rekindled through the scholarship of Thomas Warton and others. The Lake Poets and other Romantics, at the beginning of...
    23 KB (2,813 words) - 14:40, 10 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Romanticism
    century, including figures such as Joseph Warton (headmaster at Winchester College) and his brother Thomas Warton, Professor of Poetry at Oxford University...
    148 KB (18,215 words) - 19:21, 9 October 2024
  • plans". atherstone.nub.news. Retrieved 9 October 2023. Warton, Thomas (1789). Poems by Thomas Warton, fellow of Trinity College, Oxford 1789. Oxford, UK:...
    83 KB (8,456 words) - 00:12, 30 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for University of Oxford
    H. Auden, T. S. Eliot, and Philip Larkin, and seven poets laureate: Thomas Warton, Henry James Pye, Robert Southey, Robert Bridges, Cecil Day-Lewis, Sir...
    210 KB (18,389 words) - 15:35, 14 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for William Whitehead (poet)
    English poet and playwright. He became Poet Laureate in December 1757 after Thomas Gray declined the position. The son of a baker, Whitehead was born in Cambridge...
    9 KB (703 words) - 00:08, 13 August 2023
  • Thumbnail for Oliver Goldsmith
    sorely missed good company, which Goldsmith naturally provided in spades. Thomas De Quincey wrote of him "All the motion of Goldsmith's nature moved in the...
    24 KB (2,814 words) - 16:21, 24 July 2024
  • to Winchester, where he stayed three years, under Dr. Joseph Warton, and Thomas Warton, the professor of poetry. In 1780 Russell became a member of New...
    3 KB (393 words) - 02:02, 18 September 2024
  • show the influence of the Graveyard School. Thomas Parnell John Keats Thomas Warton Thomas Percy Thomas Gray Oliver Goldsmith William Cowper Christopher...
    11 KB (1,442 words) - 15:59, 28 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Malvern, Worcestershire
    Aris (1853). The Poetical Works of Thomas Gray, Thomas Parnell, William Collins, Matthew Green, And Thomas Warton. London: Routledge & Sons. p. 112. The...
    156 KB (13,950 words) - 16:33, 29 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Western canon
    interest in Elizabethan poetry was rekindled through the scholarship of Thomas Warton and others. However, the canon of Renaissance poetry was formed in the...
    79 KB (8,871 words) - 11:08, 12 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for River Loddon
    Thomas Warton the elder from 1723 until his death in 1745. The 300-line poem The Pleasures of Melancholy, written by the precocious younger Warton at...
    43 KB (5,019 words) - 17:25, 26 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Sonnet
    half of the 18th century. Amongst the first to revive the form was Thomas Warton, who took Milton for his model. Around him at Oxford were grouped those...
    84 KB (10,451 words) - 21:03, 14 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Jane Warton (writer)
    a member of a literary family. Jane Warton was the daughter of Thomas (1688–1745) and Elizabeth (1691–1762) Warton. She was baptized in 1724 in Basingstoke...
    8 KB (803 words) - 10:47, 6 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Courtly love
    Chivalric–Matriarchal reading of courtly love, put forth by critics such as Thomas Warton and Karl Vossler. This theory considers courtly love as the intersection...
    38 KB (4,747 words) - 06:22, 10 September 2024