Leigh Hunt's Relations With Byron, Shelley And Keats

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In this respect he never ceased to admire him or to be influenced by The Exam- iner in the campaign against government corruption. Yet his own equipment of mind and training, visionary as his theories seem, gave him a power of speculation and grasp of situation at this time, are identical with passages in a letter of February 22 of the same year, addressed to the editor of The Statesman, presumably Finnerty.
(Shelley's Early Life, pp. i— 106.) ° Hancock, The French Revolution and English Poets,
... pp. 50-77.
'Letter to Miss Kitchener, June 25, 181 1.
67 that ignored the limitations of time and space, while Hunt, with his narrower view, never got beyond the petty and immediate details of one nation or of one age.
The social improvements which Shelley advocated were Catholic Emancipation, brought about later, as has been pointed out by Symonds, by the very means which Shelley foresaw and prophesied ; reform of parliamentary representation^ similar to that carried into effect in 1832, 1867 and 1882; freedom of the press" and repeal of the union of Great Britain and Ireland; the abolition of capital punishment and of war.' During the fourteen years of Hunt's editorship, among the reforms for which he fought in The Examiner were the first three of these measures.


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