With clarity and thoroughness, Moody and Lovett present this 1902 literary history for students. Beginning with early Anglo-Saxon and Norman-French literature, the book then discusses Chaucer and Spenser, continuing through Shakespeare and his contemporaries, the Renaissance, the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries—which brought the rise of the novel—and wraps up with the nineteenth-century Victorian novel.
Giới thiệu về tác giả
William Vaughn Moody (1869-1910) was an American dramatist and poet. He taught at Harvard, Radcliffe, and the University of Chicago. He is best remembered for his plays, such as The Masque of Judgment (1900), The Great Divide (1902), and The Fire Bringer (1904).
Robert Morss Lovett (1870-1956) was an American academic, writer, and activist. He taught at Harvard and the University of Chicago, as well as working as editor of The New Republic. He wrote Richard Gresham (1904), Winged Victory (1907), and the play Cowards (1914), among other works.