Home 1740〜1799
Print
Robert Southey (1774-1843)

English Romantic Poet, born in Bristol, 12 August 1774. Southey proceeded to Oxford University and established a close friendship with Samuel Taylor Coleridge. At Oxford they planned to construct an egalitarian commune, ‘Pantisocracy,’ a name they coined themselves. In 1800 he went to Spain, and after his return he settled in the Lake District, being known as one of the ‘Lake poets’ together with Coleridge and Wordsworth. Southey was appointed Poet Laureate in 1813. For thirty years, he also served as a contributor to Quarterly Review, which was first published in 1809 to counter Edinburgh Review.

 

In 1794 he published his first collection of poems. His representative work includes The Curse of Kehama (1810), an epic rooted in Hindu mythology, and Life of Nelson (1813), a biography of Horatio Nelson (1758-1805). He composed many literary ballads from 1796 to 1798, of which ‘The Inchcape Rock’ and ‘The Battle of Blenheim’ were especially influential in making rigid 18th century verse more flexible. (M. I.)


  1. The Battle of Blenheim

  2. Bishop Bruno

  3. Cornelius Agrippa

  4. Donica

  5. God’s Judgment on a Wicked Bishop

  6. The Inchcape Rock

  7. Jaspar

  8. Lord William

  9. Mary, the Maid of the Inn

  10. The Old Woman of Berkeley

  11. The Painter of Florence

  12. Queen Mary’s Christening

  13. Queen Orraca and the Five Martyrs of Morocco

  14. Roprecht the Robber

  15. Rudiger

  16. St. Patrick’s Purgatory

  17. The Surgeon’s Warning

  18. A True Ballad of St. Antidius, the Pope, and the Devil

  19. The Well of St. Keyne