William Gilbert and Esoteric Romanticism

William Gilbert and Esoteric Romanticism A Contextual Study and Annotated Edition of 'The Hurricane' - Romantic Reconfigurations

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Publisher's Synopsis

William Gilbert, poet, theosophist and astrologer, published The Hurricane: A Theosophical and Western Eclogue in Bristol in 1796, while he was on intimate terms with key members of Bristol literary culture: Coleridge published an extract from The Hurricane in his radical periodical The Watchman; Robert Southey wrote of the poem's 'passages of exquisite Beauty'; and William Wordsworth praised and quoted a long passage from Gilbert's poem in The Excursion. The Hurricane is a copiously annotated 450 line blank verse visionary poem set on the island of Antigua where, in 1763, Gilbert was born into a slave-owning Methodist family. The poem can be grouped with other apocalyptic poems of the 1790s-Blake's Continental Prophecies, Coleridge's Religious Musings, Southey's Joan of Arc-all of which gave a spiritual interpretation to the dramatic political upheavals of their time.

William Gilbert and Esoteric Romanticism presents the untold story of Gilbert's progress from the radical occultist circles of 1790s London to his engagement with the first generation Romantics in Bristol. At the heart of the book is the first modern edition of The Hurricane, fully annotated to reveal the esoteric metaphysics at its core, followed by close interpretative analysis of this strange elusive poem.

Book information

ISBN: 9781800856660
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Imprint: Liverpool University Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 821.6
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: 272
Weight: 416g
Height: 156mm
Width: 233mm
Spine width: 21mm