Written by well-established critic Edmund Gosse, this 1898 work traces the history of English literature from Chaucer to Tennyson.First published in 1897 (though the version reissued here was published in 1898 in the series Short Histories of the Literatures of the World), this book documents English literature from Chaucer to Tennyson. Rather than focusing on the biographical and historical aspects, Gosse concentrates instead on literary technique and form.First published in 1897 (though the version reissued here was published in 1898 in the series Short Histories of the Literatures of the World), this book documents English literature from Chaucer to Tennyson. Rather than focusing on the biographical and historical aspects, Gosse concentrates instead on literary technique and form.Edmund Gosse (18491928), author and literary critic, held posts as a lecturer at Trinity College, Cambridge, and librarian to the House of Lords; he was honoured with a knighthood in 1925. His 1897 history of English literature (of which the version reissued here was published a year later by William Heinemann as Volume 3 in the series Short Histories of the Literatures of the World) traces the nation's greatest literature, from Chaucer to Tennyson, across eleven chapters. Rather than concentrating on biographical or sociological detail of English literary history, Gosse's book instead focuses on literary technique and style, intending to instil 'a feeling of the evolution of English literature in the primary sense of the term'. Gosse had his detractors, who accused him of a cavalier approach to factual detail, but his novel approach to literary criticism means that the work can still be read with interest and enjoyment.Preface; 1. The age of Chaucer (13501400); 2. The close of the middle ages (14001560); 3. The age of Elizabeth (15601620); 4. The decline (162060); 5. The age of Dryden (16601700); 6. The age of Anne (170040); 7. The age of Johnson (174080); 8. The age of Wordsworlƒ°