Termez state pedagogical university
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- 8. John Keats
- 7. John Milton
9. Charlotte Brontë
Charlotte Brontë was a teacher. She worked with her two sisters as a writer, Emily, and Annie. In 1847, Bronte published the semi-autobiographical novel Jane Eyre, it was a hit and also it would become a literary classic. His other novels included Shirley and Whittle. He died on 31st March 1835 in Howarth, Yorkshire, England. 8. John KeatsJohn Keats (October 31, 1795-February 23, 1821) is a romantic greatest poets of English literature. He was one of the second generation romantic poets, along with Lord Byron and Percy Vishi Shelley. Only four years before his death, his works were published. His poetry did not attain a very high standard in the eyes of the then critics. 8 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Dickens After his death, his poems began to receive proper evaluation and in the late nineteenth century, he was recognized as one of the most popular English poets. Its influence is seen in the numerous poets and writers of the future. According to Horace Louise Bourhaas, the first introduction to Keats’ writing was one of the most critical events in her literary life. John Keats was born in 1795 in a stable in London. His father was a stables keeper. His father died in 1804. After Kitts’ father died his mother remarried, but in 1810 his mother died of tuberculosis. 7. John MiltonJohn Milton was the greatest poets in English Literatur, pamphleteer, and historian who considered the most notable English author after William Shakespeare. Milton is best known for Paradise Lost, best known as English’s greatest epic. Together with Paradise Raised and Samson Agonistes. As a result, It confirmed Milton’s renown as one of the best poets in the world. In his prose composition, Milton favored the abolition of the Church of England and the execution of Charles I. the beginning of the English Civil War in 1642 to the re- establishment of King Charles II in 1660. He established a political philosophy in all his works that opposed oppression and state-affiliated religion. Its impact continues not only through civil war and interconnectedness but also to the American and French revolutions. In John Milton’s essay on theology, he noted the importance of freedom of conscience, the importance of scripture as a guide to faith, and religious tolerance toward unbelievers. As a civil servant, Milton became the voice of the English Commonwealth after 1649 through the management of his international correspondence and the government’s defense against police attacks from abroad. Download 228.32 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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