The Anglo-Irish style rises to its best, clearest, and most powerful expression in the works of Jonathan Swift, Oliver Goldsmith, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, and Edmund Burke. As the 20th-century Irish poet, novelist, and critic Seamus Deane observed, “Anglo-Irish writing does not begin with Swift, but Anglo-Irish literature does.” And where Swift begins, he adds, with Burke “the formation of the Anglo-Irish cultural and literary identity reaches completion.” All of these writers moved in the sphere of English letters and—with the exception of Goldsmith—politics, and, to that extent, they were insiders. All were born in Ireland, and in that respect they ...(100 of 10874 words)