
audiobook
Transcribed from the 1879 John Murray edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
When London's Drury Lane Theatre prepared to reopen in 1812, a public call went out for a celebratory address. Two witty brothers answered, not by writing a single speech but by creating a collection of clever parodies that pretended to be the opening lines of the era’s most famous poets. Their playful scheme turned a modest competition into a literary hoax that delighted both the audience and the critics.
The volume swings from a gentle, lakeside reverie in the style of Wordsworth to a rousing, melodramatic flourish that mimics Byron’s swagger, and even captures the solemn cadence of Scott’s historical epics. Each piece is a loving yet sharp impersonation, revealing how the brothers could capture the quirks of tone, diction and rhythm that defined their targets. Readers hear the familiar voices rearranged into a witty contest, making the book a snapshot of early‑Romantic literary culture as much as a source of amusement.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (167K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2003-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1775–1839
Best known for the wildly clever Rejected Addresses, this English humorist turned parody into a literary event. Writing with his brother Horace, he helped capture the playful, theatrical spirit of early 19th-century London.
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1779–1849
A witty English poet and novelist, he is best remembered for sparkling literary parodies and for writing a rival sonnet on Ozymandias alongside Percy Bysshe Shelley. His work mixes humor, literary play, and a lively feel for the literary world of early 19th-century Britain.
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