Lord Byron: The Critical HeritageAndrew Rutherford Routledge, 2013 M04 15 - 520 páginas The Critical Heritage gathers together a large body of critical sources on major figures in literature. Each volume presents contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling student and researcher to read the material themselves. |
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Página 39
... emotion . Lord Byron takes the trouble to caution his readers against supposing that he meant to shadow out his own character under the dark and repulsive traits of that which we have just exhibited ; a caution which was surely ...
... emotion . Lord Byron takes the trouble to caution his readers against supposing that he meant to shadow out his own character under the dark and repulsive traits of that which we have just exhibited ; a caution which was surely ...
Página 40
... emotion and suppressed sensibility that occasionally burst through the gloom . The best parts of the poem , accordingly , are those which embody those stern and dis- dainful reflexions , to which the author seems to recur with unfeigned ...
... emotion and suppressed sensibility that occasionally burst through the gloom . The best parts of the poem , accordingly , are those which embody those stern and dis- dainful reflexions , to which the author seems to recur with unfeigned ...
Página 41
... emotion , with the miscellaneous picture which it is his main business to trace on the imagination of his readers . Not satisfied even with this license of variety , he has passed at will , and entirely , from the style of Spencer , to ...
... emotion , with the miscellaneous picture which it is his main business to trace on the imagination of his readers . Not satisfied even with this license of variety , he has passed at will , and entirely , from the style of Spencer , to ...
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Contenido
33 | |
40 | |
THE TURKISH TALES 181316 | 53 |
ELLIS review of The Corsair and Lara Quarterly | 65 |
Verse commentaries on Byrons poetry 181215 | 75 |
Childe Harolds Pilgrimage Canto III 1816 | 81 |
JEFFREY Edinburgh Review 181617 | 100 |
Manfred 1817 | 116 |
Some minor reviewers on Don Juan | 258 |
Dismissive comments on Byron by KEATS | 265 |
Don Juan unpoetical? 1829 | 280 |
CARLYLE on Byron and Byronism 182443 | 286 |
MACAULAY on Byron 1831 | 295 |
BULWERLYTTON on Byrons popularity 1833 | 317 |
HENRY TAYLOR on Byrons deficiencies as a poet | 325 |
SI THACKERAY on Byrons insincerity 1846 | 342 |
PRESBYTER ANGLICANUS Blackwoods Magazine | 126 |
SCOTT Quarterly Review 1818 | 138 |
JOHN WILSON Edinburgh Review 1818 | 148 |
SHELLEY and PEACOCK on Byronic misanthropy | 156 |
Don Juan 181924 | 166 |
LEIGH HUNT review of Cantos I and | 174 |
JOHN GIBSON LOCKHART John Bulls Letter | 182 |
CROKER On Cantos III and IV 1820 | 192 |
JEFFREY on Don Juan 1822 | 199 |
THE DRAMAS 1821 | 207 |
Some reactions to Cain | 214 |
HUNT review of Cain Examiner 1822 | 222 |
JEFFREY review of Sardanapalus The Two Foscari | 228 |
Quarterly Review 1822 | 236 |
The Vision of Judgment 1822 | 249 |
KINGSLEY on Shelley and Byron 1853 1859 | 350 |
BAGEHOT on the mere fashion for Byron 1864 1879 | 365 |
SWINBURNEs defence of Byron 1866 1875 | 373 |
JOHN MORLEY on Byron and the Revolution 1870 | 384 |
JOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS on Byron 1880 | 410 |
RUSKIN on Byron 184186 | 421 |
ARNOLD on Byron 185088 | 441 |
W E HENLEY on Byron 1881 1890 | 460 |
SAINTSBURY on Byrons secondrateness 1896 | 477 |
CHESTERTON on Byrons optimism 1902 | 484 |
J F A PYRE on Byron and modern taste 1907 | 491 |
ARTHUR SYMONS on Byron 1909 | 497 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 506 |
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