
- •Lecture 1 the anglo-saxon period 449-1066 plan:
- •The germanic invasions
- •Anglo-saxon civilization
- •Anglo-saxon literature
- •Beowulf
- •Bede, the venerable (673-735)
- •Lecture 2 the medieval period 1066-1485 plan:
- •6. The Crusades
- •Lecture 3
- •Lecture 4
- •Lecture 5
- •Christopher Marlowe (1564-1593) Sir Walter Raleigh (1552-1618)
- •Shakespeare’s Literary Career and his works
- •Shakespeare's Theater
- •The Tragedy of Macbeth
- •Lecture 6
- •Civil war, the protectorate, and the restoration (1625-1660)
- •The metaphysical poets
- •John donne (1572-1631)
- •Andrew marvell (1621-1678)
- •Ben jonson (1572-1637)
- •Lecture 7 The Puritan Age
- •John Milton (1608-1674)
- •From Paradise Lost
- •The Language of Paradise Lost
- •John Bunyan 1628-1688
- •Lecture 8
- •Restoration england
- •England in the eighteenth century
- •John Dryden 1631-1700
- •Samuel Pepys (1633-1703)
- •Lecture 9
- •Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)
- •Alexander Pope (1688-1744)
- •Lecture 10
- •Samuel Johnson 1709-1784
- •Thomas Gray 1716-1771
- •Lecture 11
- •The historical background: revolution and reaction
- •William Wordsworth 1770-1850
- •In the great city, pent 'mid cloisters dim,
- •Lecture 11
- •George Gordon, Lord Byron (1788-1824)
- •Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)
- •John Keats (1995-1821)
- •Lecture 13
- •Victorian literature: nonfiction prose and drama
- •Lecture 14
- •Virginia WooH
- •1882-1941
- •James Joyce
- •1882-1941
- •D. H. Lawrence
- •1885-1930
- •Katherine Mansfield
- •1888-1923
- •Frank o'Connor
- •1903-1966
- •Lecture 15
- •Seamus Heaney (1939)
John Bunyan 1628-1688
We know about Bunyan's life primarily from his autobiography, Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners (1666). His father was a poor village tinker (a maker and repairer of metal utensils), and Bunyan received only the simplest education before taking up his father's trade. He eventually married and fought with the Parliamentary army during the Civil War. But as the title of his autobiography suggests, the important thing in Bunyan's life was an intense religious struggle, through which he became convinced of his own sinful unworthiness, and eventually of the gift of grace and salvation. He joined one of the many Baptist sects flourishing in England during the Commonwealth and became a dedicated preacher. When Charles II reinstated the monarchy and the Church of England, he promised leniency to Protestant Dissenters such as Bunyan. But the Anglican hierarchy was less forgiving. Many from the Dissenting sects, including Bunyan, were imprisoned. Although he remained in jail for twelve years, Bunyan continued to preach to his fellow prisoners and to write religious books. He was released and allowed to become the pastor of a Nonconformist church in Bedford, but in 1675 he was imprisoned again. It was during this second imprisonment that he wrote his most inspired work, The Pilgrim's Progress from This World to That Which Is To Come (1678). Over the centuries it has been the most widely read work produced during the Puritan Age, and one of the most popular pieces of Christian writing ever to appear in English.
The Pilgrim's Progress is an allegory — a narrative in which general concepts such as sin, despair, and faith are represented as people or as aspects of the natural world. In The Pilgrim's Progress, the basis of the allegorical narrative is the idea of life as a journey. The traveler's name is Christian, and he represents every Christian. The figures and places Christian encounters on his journey stand for the various experiences every Christian must go through in the quest for salvation. The liveliness and power of Bunyan's allegory derive from his ability as a storyteller and from his skill at maintaining a convincing relationship between elements of the fiction and their spiritual significance. General Christian ideas are given vivid, immediate life. Bunyan's prose, modeled on that of the King James Bible, is clear enough to be followed by any reader, and it is always full of specific and plausible detail.
Lecture 8
The Restoration and Eighteenth Century
Plan:
1. Restoration England
2. England in the Eighteenth Century
3. John Dryden
4. Samuel Pepys
THE RESTORATION
It is customary to date the beginning of a new literary period with oration in 1660, when the Stuarts returned from exile to the throne. This historical convention has more to recommend most. It was a time when people sought to establish society: arts on a firm basis, and a time when dislike of change: a guiding principle, so that there was a deliberate attempt to lings the way they were. But change is inevitable, and order survives except by evolving into new kinds of order. Literary tendencies after the middle of the eighteenth century, like the social scene reflect, are filled with hints that the old order was breaking and that new ways of understanding the world were bound to follow. In literary history a significant turning point is the publication in 1798 of Lyrical Ballads, a deliberately innovative collection of poems by William Wordsworth (1770-1850) and Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1773-1834).