Kent Literature

Kent Literature

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Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Recuperating in Ramsgate

Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834) is the English Romantic figure par excellence. Despite living almost two centuries ago, his poetry, his letters, copious notebooks and treatises on literature and philosophy, despite their often idiosyncratic spelling and grammar, have a very contemporary feel. He brought his most intimate life into all of Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsJune 28, 2020 ago
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John Gower: Chaucer’s Friend From Kent

John Gower (c1330-1408) was an almost exact contemporary of Geoffrey Chaucer and William Langland, and, like both of them, associated with the popularisation and acceptance of literature in English rather than Latin. Of his most important surviving work, however, each is written in a different language: `Mirour de l’Omme’ is Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsJune 27, 2020 ago
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William Somner: Canterbury’s Archaeologist of the Past

The life of the antiquarian, William Somner (1598-1669) spanned the end of the Tudor period and the establishment, and then re-establishment, of the House of Stuart. He was a noted Royalist, and imprisoned briefly in Deal for his pains in 1659 for petitioning for a free parliament. A native of Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsJune 26, 2020 ago
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Wendy Cope: Erith

Wendy Cope (1945-) published her first collection of poetry `Making Cocoa for Kingsley Amis’ in 1986, after a career as a primary school teacher, an editor and television critic for `The Spectator’.  While her output has been slight, with five collections in all of adult poetry, she has gained a Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsJune 25, 2020 ago
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E M Forster: Unhappy Schooldays in Tonbridge

The work of Edward Morgan Forster (1879-1970) was immensely successful both during his long life, and then reaching a wide new audience through film renditions afterwards. `A Passage to India’ (1924) in particular has enjoyed a large and enthusiastic readership since its publication almost a century ago.  Forster’s lightly held, Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsJune 24, 2020 ago
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William Lambarde: Elizabethan Rambling in Kent

While John Leland (1503-1552) is regarded as the founder of the tradition of local history in England, his work had a national range. The work of the slightly later William Lambarde (1536-1601) focussed on Kent and contained far more in detail, as well as a richer description of local customs. Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsJune 23, 2020 ago
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Agatha Christie: The Mystery of the Writer and the Grand Hotel, Folkestone

It is stated emphatically on the website of the Grand Hotel, sitting atop the Leas in Folkestone: `Agatha Christie wrote “Murder on the Orient Express” in the building” (https://grand-uk.com/). This story is duplicated in a number of other places. In the local history museum, in one of its displays; in Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsJune 22, 2020 ago
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Clive King: The Tale of the Mysterious Quarry in Ash

The children’s novel, `Stig of the Dump’ has had a secure hold on the affections of its younger, and older, readers ever since it was published in 1963. Dramatised for television twice, in the early 1980s and then in the 2000s, the name of its caveman protagonist Stig was to Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsJune 21, 2020 ago
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Arthur Mee: The Patriot of Eynsford

For people in the latter half of the 20th century, there were two main choices for comprehensive guidebooks about local history and the record of the built environment across the whole of England. One of these was the immense work of the German émigré to Britain Nikolaus Pevsner, `The Buildings Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsJune 20, 2020 ago
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St Anselm of Canterbury: Perfection and Existence

Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury from 1093 to 1109, was born in Aosta in northwest Italy, though moved to the monastery of Bec in Normandy when he was in his early twenties. His career typifies the Catholic church during this era, where its leadership and many followers and personnel shifted across Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsJune 19, 2020 ago

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