James Henry Leigh Hunt - biography, career, poetry

birthday poems poetry

A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   K   L   M   N   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   X   Y   Z  

love poems

friendship poems
funny poems
inspirational poems
birthday poems
wedding poems
child poems
mother poems
sister poems
  sad poems
  funeral poems
 anniversary poems
 family poems
daughter poems
death poems
baby poems
broken heart poems
graduation poems
retirement poems
haiku poems
short poems
sweet poems
teen poems
thank you poems
sympathy poems
life poems
Christian poems
nature poems
black poems
romantic poems

This is the place to search for a free poet biography. The best resource for quotes and poetry.

 

James Henry Leigh Hunt

James Henry Leigh Hunt Hunt’s father was an American clergyman who came to settle in Southgate, Middlesex. Leigh attended Christ’s Hospital school in London, and published his first book of poetry, Juvenilia, at the age of seventeen. The following year he set up the weekly Examiner, with his brother John. This was the first of a series of journals he edited, which included the Reflector, Indicator, Companion, Tatler and London Journal. The influence of literary magazines was very strong at this time, and Hunt was responsible for recognising and promoting emerging writers of the calibre of Keats, Shelley and Tennyson.

The popularity of his journalism was not without its drawbacks, however; in 1813 he and his brother were imprisoned for their attacks on the Prince Regent. The two years he spent in jail gained Hunt the reputation of a Liberal martyr, but it also damaged his health. On his release he rejoined a thriving literary society which included Charles Lamb, William Hazlitt and Thomas De Quincey, as well as several great Romantic poets; Shelley was introduced to Keats at Hunt’s house.

In 1822 Hunt took his family to Italy, where he planned to start a new journal, The Liberal, in collaboration with Shelley and Byron. Unfortunately the venture was cut short when Shelley was drowned, and Hunt was left in serious financial trouble when Byron departed for Greece in 1824. He returned to England the following year, where he pursued his literary and journalistic career into his late sixties.

Hunt was a key figure in the development of English literature during the Romantic period, both as a writer and an editor. In poetry he turned to the Italians for what he called ’a freer spirit of versification’ and the influence of the Elizabethans on his work was also significant. In addition to his own work, he was immortalised by Charles Dickens, in the character of Skimpole in Bleak House.


About the author:

http://www.famouspoetsandpoems.com

Home -Link to this page



Free Poetry Contest
Poetry.com will award over 1,200 awards and prizes totaling over $100,000 to amateur poets in the coming months. All contestants are eligible for both of our contests. Join Now!

 

Copy and paste this into the code of your webpage:

Various information on poets - their biographies and other info.

poem contest - poem of the day - terms and conditions - tell a friend - our goals - contact us - bookmark this site - links - poetry contest
This page is best viewed in 1024X768 resolution
Copyright © 2005 LoveThePoem.com - Poets biographies