- William Taylor (scholar)
William Taylor (1765–1836) was a
scholar , polyglot, andtranslator of Germanromantic literature .He was born in
Norwich as the son of a wealthy Norwichmerchant with European trade connections. William Taylor was taughtLatin , French and Dutch by John Bruckner,pastor of the French and DutchProtestant churches in Norwich, in preparation to continue his father's continental trading.However, Taylor became the leading member of Norwich
intelligentsia . A political radical like Wordsworth and Coleridge, he applauded theFrench Revolution . Taylor never abandoned hisleft-wing principles. He argued foruniversal suffrage and the end of all governmental intervention in the affairs ofreligion . Even after a right-wing back-lash against the excesses of the French Revolution in the late 1790s he maintained his radical views and the 18th century tradition of liberal and latitudinous criticism of Biblical Scripture.William Taylor was a
nonconformist and attended the newly-built Neo-ClassicalUnitarian Octagonchapel (1756) in Norwich, whosearchitect wasThomas Ivory . He was nicknamed "godless Billy" for his radical views. A heavy drinker, his contemporaryHarriet Martineau said of him::"his habits of intemperance kept him out of the sight of ladies, and he got round him a set of ignorant and conceited young men, who thought they could set the whole world right by their destructive propensities".
In 1799 he embarked upon a tour of Europe, visiting
France ,Italy andGermany . Between 1793–1799 he wrote over 200 reviews, introducing the concept of 'philosophical criticism'.William Taylor was England's leading advocate and enthusiast of German Romantic literature until the return of Coleridge from Germany in 1799. He met Goethe as early as 1782 and again in 1793. He sent his translation of
Iphigenie to Goethe, but felt slighted at having received no acknowledgement from theWeimar sage. Although it aroused no interest in England, this translation was nonetheless valued by Goethe as he ordered his publisherUnger to issue a special "De luxe" edition of it. Both Taylor's "Iphigenie auf Tauris " ("Iphigenia in Tauris")" and his "Survey of German literature" are recorded as once in Goethe's private library.In 1828 the author
Thomas Carlyle informed and reminded Goethe that::"A Mr.Taylor of Norwich who is at present publishing 'Specimens of German Poetry', is a man of learning and long ago gave a version of your "
Iphigenie auf Tauris " ("Iphigenia in Tauris")" Taylor is depicted as a mentor in Borrow's semi-autobiographicalnovel Lavengro .George Borrow described hisphilological teacher as::" the Anglo-German... a real character, the founder of the Anglo-German school in England, and the cleverest Englishman who ever talked or wrote encomiastic nonsense about Germany and the Germans".
Romany Rye A confirmed
bachelor , Taylor lived with his parents. He had a daily routine of studying in the morning, walking in the afternoon followed by bathing in the RiverWensum . In the evening he liked to socialise, drink (heavily) and discusslinguistics ,literature andphilosophy in society.Taylor is important for being in the vanguard of
literary criticism , encouraging the newly-emerging Romantic literature of Wordsworth and Coleridge, both of whom were indebted for his, if not always accurate, enthusiastic translations of Germanromantic literature . From his translations of GermanRomantic literature there emerged Wordsworth's and Coleridge'sLyrical Ballads of 1798.External links
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