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  1. Oct 17, 2008 · Leigh Hunt is a freebooter and pirate ravaging the West Indies in the late seventh century. A company of British marines swarms his ship, the Scourge. Hunt is tied to a rope and lowered over the side to be eaten by sharks. Like the Flying Dutchman, Leigh Hunt and his crew of pirates still roam the waters.

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  2. Leigh Hunt. 1784–1859. Benjamin Robert Haydon/Courtesy the National Portrait Gallery, London. Leigh Hunt, prolific poet, essayist, and journalist, was a central figure of the Romantic movement in England. He produced a large body of poetry in a variety of forms: narrative poems, satires, poetic dramas, odes, epistles, sonnets, short lyrics ...

  3. Mar 14, 2024 · Leigh Hunt (born October 19, 1784, Southgate, Middlesex, England—died August 28, 1859, Putney, London) was an English essayist, critic, journalist, and poet, who was an editor of influential journals in an age when the periodical was at the height of its power. He was also a friend and supporter of the poets Percy Bysshe Shelley and John Keats.

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  5. by Leigh Hunt. O F Bacchus let me tell a sparkling story. — 'Twas by the sea-side, on a promontory, As like a blooming youth he sat one day,

  6. Leigh Hunt. James Henry Leigh Hunt was born 19 October 1784 in Southgate, Middlesex and died on 28 August 1859 in London. As a writer, Hunt was a jack-of-all-trades, achieving early success as a critic, essayist, journalist, and poet, and establishing himself as an editor of influential journals in an age when the periodical was at the height ...

  7. Leigh Hunt as literary figure: a brief history. Leigh Hunt (1784-1859), Romantic writer, editor, critic and contemporary of Byron, Shelley, and Keats, may be best remembered for being sentenced to prison for two years on charges of libel against the Prince Regent (1813-1815).

  8. LEIGH HUNT today appears as a rather secondary figure among the. great English romantic writers. His fame suffers from their glory. Wordsworth and Coleridge had published their Lyrical Ballads when he started publishing some of the poems he had written at Christ's Hospital in the style of the eighteenth century.

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