Current
Editions |
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Samuel
Taylor Coleridge & Robert
Southey. The
Fall of Robespierre (1794).
Edited by Daniel E. White,
with Sarah Copland and
Stephen Osadetz.
This
edition provides an annotated
text of the play, supplemented
by a wide range of literary
and journalistic materials that
offer contexts in which to understand
the work's place in relation
to the authors' politics, the
transmission and reception of
news, and the role of Robespierre
within English political culture. |
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New
Letters from Charles Brown
to Joseph Severn (1821-42).
Edited by Grant F. Scott and
Sue Brown
A
collection of 46 letters published
in full for the first time, shedding
new light on the life and character
of Charles Brown and the most
important friendship in the Keats
Circle, as well as Keats’s
complex legacy to his friends. |
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Archived
Editions |
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Thomas
Lovell Beddoes. The
Brides' Tragedy (1822).
Edited by David Baulch.
This
edition presents both the full
text and relevant contexts of
the play, including a comprehensive
introduction and extensive notes
by the editor, two of the sources
of the play, and four contemporary
reviews. |
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Erasmus
Darwin. The
Temple of Nature (1803).
Edited by Martin Priestman.
The
first fully annotated edition
of Erasmus Darwin's influential
scientific poem and its copious
original notes; including the
first publication, from draft,
of Darwin's hitherto unknown
poetic history of technology, The
Progress of Society. |
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Poets
on Poets.
Edited by Tilar Mazzeo
with Doug Guerra and Matt
O'Donnell.
An
audio archive of Romantic-period
poems selected and read by practicing
poets from around the world.
Updated quarterly. Includes
some audio commentary, textual
transcriptions of the poems
read, as well as a link to subscribe
to an RSS feed for podcasting. |
|
 | Benjamin Disraeli. Alroy
(1871). Edited by Sheila A. Spector. This
early novel, first published in 1833, represents Disraeli in "romantic mode."
This version features the novel, an introduction, annotations, reprints of Disraeli's
sources, contemporary reviews, & modern criticism, as well as a detailed bibliography
of Disraeli's life and works, criticism, & other contextual materials. |
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An electronic edition of Bennett's collection of 350 poems
highlighting the complex attitudes to the wars of the period. Includes Bennett's
original introduction & a new bibliography of poems not included in the original
edition. |
|
 | Robert
Southey. Wat Tyler, A Dramatic Poem
(1817). Edited by Matt Hill. An electronic
edition of Robert Southey's poem based on the peasants' rebellion of 1381. This
edition provides contextual background on the poem's embattled publication and
partisan reception. |
|
 | Felicia
Dorothea Hemans. The Sceptic: A Hemans-Byron Dialogue(1820).
Edited by Nanora Sweet and Barbara Taylor. This
edition places Hemans in direct contention with Byron over belief in an afterlife.
Includes letters, reviews, poems & critical essays that probe the work for
its engagements with Byron, allusions to topics of the day, & negotiation
of gender. |
|  | Maria
Jane Jewsbury. The Oceanides (1832-3).
Edited by Judith Pascoe. This edition
situates the poem sequence within Jewsbury's life and career, including a prose
account of her journey to India, memoirs, & poems inspired by her work. Allows
readers to view original poems as they first appeared in The Athenaeum. |
|
 | Samuel Taylor Coleridge &
William Wordsworth. Lyrical Ballads (1798-1805). Edited
by Ron Tetreault and Bruce Graver. This electronic
edition makes available all 4 versions of Lyrical Ballads in the form of
transcriptions edited from original printed copies, accompanied by images of each
page. Enables active comparison of texts through Dynamic Collation. |
|
 | Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
The Wanderings of Cain (1828, 1834). Edited by N. Santilli.
Publishes, for the first time, all the fragments
of this unfinished poem in one edition. Includes a composite reading text, piecing
together all the fragments, & a parallel reading text of both Canto II and
verse fragment. | |  | Edward Ellerker Williams.
Sporting Sketches during a Short Stay in Hindustane
(1814). Edited by Tilar Mazzeo. Includes
MS Shelley adds.e.21 and MS Shelley adds.c.12, together comprising Williams's
complete travel journal to India, here published in its entirety for the first
time. Also included is a critical introduction. | |  | Anna Lætitia Aikin [later
Barbauld]. Poems
(1773). Edited by Lisa Vargo and Allison Muri. Includes
transcriptions, photo reproductions of the original volume, critical apparatus,
& a "Poem Web," featuring detailed commentary & contextual materials for
"On a Lady's Writing." | |  | William Hone. The
Political House that Jack Built (1820).
Edited by Kyle Grimes. Includes diplomatic
transcription of the title page and Hone's verse text, as well as the poem "The
Clerical Magistrate". Also offers original illustrations by George Cruikshank,
a William Hone chronology, & annotated bibliography. |
|  | John Keats. A Rediscovered Letter
by John Keats (1818). Edited
by Dearing Lewis. Includes introduction, diplomatic
transcription, & notes. | |  | L.E.L.'s 'Verses'
and The Keepsake for 1829. Edited by Terence Hoagwood, Kathryn
Ledbetter, and Martin M. Jacobsen. Includes
introduction, diplomatic transcriptions, facsimile pages, biography, bibliography,
& commentary. | |  | Richard Brinsley Peake Presumption;
or, The Fate of Frankenstein (1823). Edited by Stephen C. Behrendt.
Includes an introduction, full text of the play,
images of the 1823 cast, a bibliography and filmography, the first reviews of
Presumption, & a biography of Richard Brinsley Peake. |
|  | Mary Darby Robinson. A Letter to the
Women of England, on the Injustice of Mental Subordination (1799). Edited
by Adriana Craciun, Anne Irmen Close, Megan Musgrave, & Orianne Smith.
Includes introduction, transcriptions, reviews,
letters to and from Robinson, selected poems, bibliography, & notes. |
|  | Mary Shelley. The Last
Man (1826). Edited by Steven Jones. Includes
HTML, ASCII, and SGML versions, other works by Mary Shelley, works and excerpts
from works cited by Shelley, bibliography, maps, images & sound files, critical
essays, contemporary works on plague, notes. | |  | Mary Shelley. The Mortal
Immortal (1833). Edited by Michael Eberle-Sinatra. Includes
HTML and ASCII versions, related contemporary literary works, critical bibliography,
print history, images, writings on the text, & notes. |
|  | Percy Bysshe Shelley. The Devil's
Walk (1812). Edited by Neil Fraistat and Donald H. Reiman.
Includes HTML formatted texts, editors' introduction, critically
edited text, diplomatic transcription, photofacsimile, & clear reading texts.
Also includes collations, bibliography, and notes. | |  | Percy Bysshe Shelley. On the Medusa
of Leonardo da Vinci in the Florentine Gallery (1819). Edited by Neil
Fraistat and Melissa Jo Sites. Includes dialogic
commentary; critical essays by Jerome J. McGann, W.J.T. Mitchell, and Grant F.
Scott; images; bibliography; & notes. | return
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