William Blake took his inspiration for the watercolor Queen Katherine's Dream from William Shakespeare's play Henry VIII, in which an ailing Katherine (seated lower right) receives a vision in her sleep.
Welcome to From Beowulf to Virginia Woolf, a virtual companion to classroom reading, which covers writing produced in Britain from 1300-1900.
We start with the very first works written in the English language and end with Virginia Woolf's novel approach to the novel. Along the way we will watch a language grow and evolve, witness the birth of literary forms, and be privy to some of the most beautiful writing ever produced.
We'll travel from Beowulf's drinking hall to Thomas More's utopian society to Milton's paradise lost. William Wordsworth will redefine mankind's place in the poetic scheme of the universe, female authors will be given the same consideration as males, and many topics will be addressed from mice and men to gods and monsters.
Do drop in on the workshops too. We will examine rhyme, rhythm, and metaphor, and learn to write such forms as the sestina.
Those who look at the outline below will notice a prominent name missing Shakespeare. It's because the Bard of Avon gets his own course, of course.
Please enjoy your time here. This may be where you actually develop an appreciation for something that can bring a lifetime of meaning and pleasure: reading.
UNIT AND FOCUS AREAS