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Poets and Principles
Tom Paulin
Spirit of the Age
Tom Paulin
Hazlitt Day
Ian Mayes
Revival Time
Ian Mayes
A Memorial for Hazlitt
AC Grayling
Liberty's Brightest Star
Tom Paulin

 

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Michael Foot

 

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Radical Solution
John Ezard

 

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Uttara Natarajan

 

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June 2011

 

Annual lecture
17 September 2011

 

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The 11th Hazlitt Day School will be taking place at UCL on 9 June 2012 (click here) William Hazlitt

(1778–1830)

The Spirit of the Age

 

Man is a toad-eating animal. The admiration of power in others is as common to man as the love of it in himself: the one makes him a tyrant, the other a slave.

‘Toad-eaters and Tyrants’

 

William Hazlitt was born in Maidstone in 1778. His mother, Grace Loftus, was from a Dissenting family in Cambridgeshire, and his father, the Reverend William Hazlitt, was an Irish Unitarian minister from Co. Tipperary. Hazlitt was educated at the Unitarian New College in Hackney, then studied art and tried to earn a living as a portrait painter. He was also keenly interested in philosophy and published his first book, A Study of the Principles of Human Action, in 1805. He later became a journalist and theatre critic, the first major drama critic in English, as well as the first major art critic, and one of the most gifted literary and general essayists in English. He is one of the greatest political journalists and one of the finest prose stylists in the language. Unlike his contemporaries, Wordsworth, Coleridge and Southey, he remained a lifelong radical, and this led to quarrels with friends, though his deep friendship with Charles Lamb and Leigh Hunt endured. He is a master of the essay form, and The Spirit of the Age (1825) is his masterpiece. His books include Characters of Shakespeare's Plays, The Round Table,Table-Talk, Political Essays, The Plain Speaker, Liber Amoris, and a long life of Napoleon which he published towards the end of his life. He died in 1830 in a rooming-house in Soho and is buried in St. Anne’s Churchyard nearby.

 

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