Portrait of Lord Melvyn Bragg, host of In Our Time

19th-century English poets

Literature written in the English language includes many countries such as the United Kingdom and its crown dependencies, Republic of Ireland, the United States, and the countries of the former British Empire. The English language has developed over the course of more than 1,400 years.

7 episodes

Episodes in this category also belong to the following categories:

CultureHistoryFellows of the Royal SocietyWriters about activism and social changeEnglish male poetsSonneteersCritics of the Catholic ChurchBurials at Westminster AbbeyEnglish male non-fiction writersNobel laureates in LiteraturePantheistsBritish male essayistsEnglish AnglicansEnglish people of Scottish descentEnglish male dramatists and playwrightsEnglish male novelistsEnglish non-fiction writersLiteracy and society theoristsVictorian novelists19th-century English novelists19th-century pseudonymous writersEnglish male short story writersEnglish travel writersEpic poetsVictorian poets19th-century English non-fiction writers20th-century English male writers20th-century English poetsBritish critics of religionsEnglish Nobel laureatesEnglish atheistsEnglish satiristsEnglish socialistsMembers of the Order of MeritRomantic poetsTrope theoristsWriters of Gothic fiction19th-century British philanthropists19th-century British short story writers20th-century English novelistsAnglican writersBritish Nobel laureatesEnglish Catholic poetsEnglish fantasy writersEnglish libertariansEnglish philanthropistsEnglish short story writersFellows of the Royal Society of LiteratureLibertarian socialists19th-century Anglicans19th-century English dramatists and playwrights19th-century English essayists19th-century travel writersArtist authorsArtists' Rifles soldiersBritish social reformersBritish socialistsKnights of the GarterLecturersMythopoeic writersTranslators of HomerVictorian eraWriters from the London Borough of Camden19th-century British journalists19th-century English architects19th-century English politicians19th-century English short story writers20th-century English memoiristsAlumni of Balliol College, OxfordAlumni of King's College LondonArts and Crafts movement artistsBritish botanical illustratorsBritish male poetsConverts to Roman Catholicism from AnglicanismDeaths from ulcersEnglish anti-fascistsEnglish biographersEnglish children's writersEnglish historical novelists, 19th-century English historiansEnglish hymnwritersEnglish printers, Translators of VirgilEnglish prisoners and detaineesEnglish reformersEnglish science fiction writersEnglish-language poets from IndiaFreemasons of the United Grand Lodge of EnglandLords Privy SealMaritime writersMembers of the Privy Council of the United KingdomPeople educated at Marlborough CollegePeople from Northamptonshire (before 1974)People from Somers Town, LondonPeople of the Victorian eraPeople with mood disordersPoet priestsRectors of the University of GlasgowRectors of the University of St AndrewsSocial Democratic Federation membersUK MPs 1865–1868
  1. Benjamin Disraeli

    Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss one of the most famous politicians of the Victorian age, who broadened his fame and spread his ideas through popular novels.

    19 September 2024

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    Featuring: Lawrence Goldman, Emily Jones, Daisy Hay

     
  2. Dickens

    Melvyn Bragg discusses the achievements of Charles Dickens What is his political and literary legacy to our age?

    12 July 2001

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    Featuring: Rosemary Ashton, Michael Slater, John Bowen

     
  3. Gerard Manley Hopkins

    Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the works of Hopkins, unpublished in his lifetime, who FR Leavis called 'the only influential poet of the Victorian age and the greatest'.

    21 March 2019

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    Featuring: Catherine Phillips, Jane Wright, Martin Dubois

     
  4. John Clare

    Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss John Clare, the 'Northamptonshire peasant poet', whose writing was as celebrated as his life was humble.

    9 February 2017

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    Featuring: Jonathan Bate, Mina Gorji, Simon Kövesi

     
  5. Rudyard Kipling

    Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the life and work of Rudyard Kipling, a writer sometimes described as the poet of empire.

    16 October 2014

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    Featuring: Howard Booth, Daniel Karlin, Jan Montefiore

     
  6. Thomas Hardy's Poetry

    Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss Hardy's poems, which he prized far above the novels which made him famous and rich, and his ambition to be ranked alongside Shelley and Byron.

    13 January 2022

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    Featuring: Mark Ford, Jane Thomas, Tim Armstrong

     
  7. William Morris

    Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss some of the many aspects of William Morris: his activism, poetry and prose and his ideas on arts, crafts and work in an industrial world.

    5 July 2018

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    Featuring: Ingrid Hanson, Marcus Waithe, Jane Thomas