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2. Victorian Novel : Fiction Becomes the Mirror of Society (1840s–1880s)

Fiction Becomes the Mirror of Society (1840s–1880s) From The Professor’s Desk The Victorian Age of Fiction: When the Novel Found Its Voice The voice of the poet had opened the Victorian Age with grandeur, grief, and doubt.In the resonant cadences of Tennyson, the brooding ironies of Browning, the spiritual melancholy of Arnold, and the moral […]

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1. Victorian Visions: Faith, Fiction, and the Fractured Empire

Victorian Poetry between the Pull of the Past and the Pressure of Progress (1832–1860s) From The Professor’s Desk PRELUDE: From Romantic Rhapsody to Victorian Realism Literary history never begins or ends cleanly at a monarch’s coronation, or with the signing of a single Act. Yet in the England of the 1830s, a series of tremors

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3. Romantic Era — Prose, Shadows, and the Endless Tale

How Romantic visions transformed prose — shaping stories, essays, and Gothic imaginings that continue to haunt and inspire the modern world. From The Professor’s Desk he Prose Turn: From Poetic Lyricism to Narrative Depth If poetry was the heart of Romanticism, prose soon became its voice — deeper, more spacious, more capable of exploring the

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2. Younger Romantics: The Wild Hearts That Burned Too Bright

Byron, Shelley, Keats — the poetic rockstars of their age, who defied convention, embraced passion, and left behind verses that outlived their short, blazing lives. From The Professor’s Desk The story of the Romantic movement is not a gentle stream — it is a river that gathers force, carves new channels, floods its banks, and

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1. The Romantic Era — When Poetry Became a Blockbuster of the Heart

Red carpet entrance: Wordsworth and Coleridge, 1798 — Lyrical Ballads drops like a literary blockbuster. From The Professor’s Desk There are moments in literary history when one age does not simply end and another begin — rather, the new age arrives walking upon a red carpet woven by its quiet forerunners. So it was in

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The Transition Era: Pre-Romantics — When Poetry Began to Feel Again

A slow turning of the poetic tide from reason to resonance, from order to emotion, from the classical to the human heart. From The Professor’s Desk There are times in the history of literature when no trumpet is sounded, no manifesto declared, yet a quiet revolution begins to stir. The late 18th century was such

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3. Neoclassics :The Last Flame of Wit — The Age of Johnson and Late Neoclassics

As the Age of Wit reached its twilight, Dr. Johnson and his circle preserved the elegance of reason and prose — even as the heart of poetry began to stir anew. From The Professor’s Desk The Augustan Age had left English letters gleaming with polish, but the polish was beginning to wear thin. The triumph

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1. The Neoclassical Age — The Tyranny of Wit and the Triumph of Form

When poetry abandoned the heart for the head, and drama bowed before decorum. From The Professor’s Desk The theatres had reopened, the crowds had returned, and London once again hummed with song and laughter. Yet beneath this glittering surface, English literature had changed irreversibly. The Puritan age had stripped poetry of its excesses, taught writers

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The Puritan Interregnum — England’s Literature in Chains and Shadows

When theatres were dark, and words learned to walk in prose and prayer. From The Professor’s Desk “The golden mask was folded. The curtain was drawn. But England was not yet done with drama—only its public stage. What followed was an era of silence, of pamphlets over plays, of sermons over soliloquies. It was a

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