• Thumbnail for William Hazlitt
    William Hazlitt (10 April 1778 – 18 September 1830) was an English essayist, drama and literary critic, painter, social commentator, and philosopher....
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  • William Carew Hazlitt (22 August 1834 – 8 September 1913), known professionally as W. Carew Hazlitt, was an English lawyer, bibliographer, editor and...
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  • William Hazlitt (1778–1830) was an English critic and essayist. William Hazlitt may also refer to: William Hazlitt (Unitarian minister) (1737–1820), his...
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  • William Hazlitt (26 September 1811 – 23 February 1893) was an English lawyer, author, and translator, best known for his Classical Gazetteer and for overseeing...
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  • Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt (1774–1843) was an English journalist and walker, and wife of the essayist William Hazlitt. She was born in 1774, the only daughter...
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  • Thumbnail for Charles Lamb
    luminaries as Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Robert Southey, William Wordsworth, Dorothy Wordsworth and William Hazlitt, Lamb was at the centre of a major literary circle...
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  • Thumbnail for William Hazlitt (Unitarian minister)
    William Hazlitt (18 April 1737 – 16 July 1820) was a Unitarian minister and author, and the father of the Romantic essayist and social commentator of...
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  • Thumbnail for Henry Hazlitt
    Henry Stuart Hazlitt (/ˈhæzlɪt/; November 28, 1894 – July 9, 1993) was an American journalist, economist, and philosopher known for his advocacy of free...
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  • Thumbnail for Characters of Shakespear's Plays
    Characters of Shakespear's Plays (category Books by William Hazlitt)
    written by early nineteenth century English essayist and literary critic William Hazlitt. Composed in reaction to the neoclassical approach to Shakespeare's...
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  • a fourth estate of the realm." In 1821, William Hazlitt applied the term to an individual journalist, William Cobbett, and the phrase soon became well...
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  • Thumbnail for The Spirit of the Age
    The Spirit of the Age (category Books by William Hazlitt)
    century English essayist, literary critic, and social commentator William Hazlitt, portraying 25 men, mostly British, whom he believed to represent significant...
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  • Thumbnail for Polonius
    judgment he makes over the course of the play, Polonius is described by William Hazlitt as a "sincere" father, but also "a busy-body, [who] is accordingly...
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  • Thumbnail for A Midsummer Night's Dream
    Pyramus and Thisbe as a burlesque of the Athenian lovers. In 1817, William Hazlitt found the play to be better as a written work than a staged production...
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  • Thumbnail for William Wilberforce
    meetings and seditious writings. Wilberforce's actions led the essayist William Hazlitt to condemn him as one "who preaches vital Christianity to untutored...
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  • Thumbnail for Kubla Khan
    reviews was written by William Hazlitt, literary critic and Romantic writer, who criticized the fragmentary nature of the work. Hazlitt said that the poem...
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  • Thumbnail for Leigh Hunt
    principles. He was the centre of the Hampstead-based group that included William Hazlitt and Charles Lamb, known as the "Hunt circle". Hunt also introduced...
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  • Thumbnail for Table-Talk
    collection of essays by the English cultural critic and social commentator William Hazlitt. It was originally published as two volumes, the first of which appeared...
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  • Zimran were Abihen, Molich and Narim. Academics such as Jan Retsö and William Hazlitt (registrar) have suggested that the descendants of Zimran are the same...
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  • journalist John Hazlitt (1767–1837), English artist William Hazlitt (Unitarian minister) (1737–1820), Unitarian minister and author William Hazlitt (1778–1830)...
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  • literary merits of William Hazlitt's Liber Amoris, a deeply personal account of frustrated love that is quite unlike anything else Hazlitt ever wrote. Wardle...
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  • Thumbnail for W. Somerset Maugham
    with whom Maugham has stylistic affinities include Jonathan Swift, William Hazlitt, John Dryden and John Henry Newman – "all practitioners of precise...
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  • Thumbnail for Romanticism
    as Walter Scott from Scotland and Mary Shelley, and the essayists William Hazlitt and Charles Lamb. The publication in 1798 of Lyrical Ballads, with...
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  • Thumbnail for Sarah Siddons
    best-known tragedienne of the 18th century. Contemporaneous critic William Hazlitt dubbed Siddons as "tragedy personified". She was the elder sister of...
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  • Thumbnail for Paradise Lost
    Romanticist critics in particular, among them William Blake, Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and William Hazlitt, are known for interpreting Satan as a hero...
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  • political spectrum - ranging from Queen Caroline to Radicals like William Hazlitt - something that has prompted a psychological explanation of their...
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  • Thumbnail for Ne supra crepidam
    Wikisource. P. Howe, ed. (1932), "A Letter to William Gifford", The Complete Works of William Hazlitt, vol. 9, p. 16; the same form is seen in an unpublished...
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  • Thumbnail for Imogen (Cymbeline)
    King Cymbeline in Shakespeare's play Cymbeline. She was described by William Hazlitt as "perhaps the most tender and the most artless" of all Shakespeare's...
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    Quarrel Of The Age: The Life And Times Of William Hazlitt. ISBN 9781780226798. Maskell, J. (1849). White, William (ed.). "Note". Notes and Queries. London...
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  • Thumbnail for John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester
    the Royal and Noble Authors of England, 1758. William Hazlitt, Select British Poets (1824) William Hazlitt, Lectures on the English Poets at Project Gutenberg...
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  • is a short descriptive geographical dictionary by William Hazlitt (son of the critic William Hazlitt), written in 1851 and containing 15,000 places of...
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