All Stories

  1. Why Romantic Poetry Still Matters
  2. Coleridge and Cosmopolitan Intellectualism 1794–1804: The Legacy of Göttingen University / Radical Contra-Diction: Coleridge, Revolution, Apostasy / Coleridge and Contemplation
  3. Coleridge’s ‘Ad Vilmum Axiologum’ and Schiller’sMusen-Almanach für das Jahr 1797
  4. Coleridge and the Romantic Newspaper
  5. The Return from Germany
  6. Homeless at Grieta Hall
  7. Introduction: A Character in the Antithetical Manner
  8. Mothers, Sons, and Poets in the Morning Post
  9. Mary Robinson and the Poet Coleridge
  10. ‘Merely the Emptying Out of My Desk’
  11. Conclusion: ‘Dejection. An Ode’ in the Morning Post as a Palimpsest
  12. The Morning Post and ‘Introduction to the Tale of the Dark Ladie’
  13. The 1800 Lyrical Ballads, Mary Robinson, and ‘The Mad Monk’
  14. ‘Beyond her own Knowledge’ in Jane Austen’s Pride And Prejudice
  15. A Perfect Storm: The Nature of Consciousness on Wordsworth'sSalisbury Plain
  16. Wordsworth's ‘Song for the Wandering Jew’ as a Poem for Coleridge
  17. Coleridge's 'On a Supposed Son' and Friedrich von Logau's 'Auf ein Zweifelkind'
  18. Alan D. Vardy, Constructing Coleridge: The Posthumous Life of the Author (Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), pp. 208. £55 hardback. 9780230574809.
  19. Introduction: Romantic Wonder
  20. Transporting English Romanticism to the Colonies: Alexander Turnbull, Coleridge's Prospectus to The Friend, and Richard Hengist Horne's Copy of Hazlitt's Book
  21. Coleridge's Notes from Christian Heinrich Spiess's Biographien der Selbstmorder
  22. Sara Coleridge's Annotation in Pretty Lessons in Verse for Good Children
  23. Keats's Letters: 'A Wilful and Dramatic Exercise of Our Minds Towards Each Other'
  24. Women poets of the Romantic period (Barbauld to Landon)
  25. A Connection between Chatterton and Wordsworth in Two Coleridge Poems
  26. Anya Taylor. Erotic Coleridge: Women, Love, and the Law against Divorce. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005. ISBN: 1-4039-6925-6. Price: £35/US$65.
  27. Shelley among Others: The Play of the Intertext and the Idea of Language
  28. Mimesis and Its Romantic Reflections
  29. Mary Shelley in Her Times
  30. Mary Wollstonecraft and the Accent of the Feminine
  31. British Women Writers and the Writing of History: 1670-1820
  32. The Crowd: British Literature and Public Politics (review)
  33. "We Are Two": The Address to Dorothy in "Tintern Abbey"
  34. Reception and Poetics in Keats: 'My Ended Poet'
  35. Keats's 'Paradise Lost'
  36. Thomas Gray: The Progress of a Poet
  37. Gray Agonistes: Thomas Gray and Masculine Friendship
  38. The Poet and the Publisher in Thomas Gray's Correspondence
  39. A NOTE ON MARY LEAPOR'S REPUTATION
  40. AN IRONIC READING OF WORDSWORTH’S ‘ODE TO DUTY’
  41. Fanny Brawne and Other Women