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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... Edinburgh Magazine's assertion that in this poem Byron ' scatters about ordure like a drunken scavenger ; yet he assures us that his organs are endowed with such exquisite sensibility that he could almost " die of a rose in aromatic ...
... Edinburgh Magazine's assertion that in this poem Byron ' scatters about ordure like a drunken scavenger ; yet he assures us that his organs are endowed with such exquisite sensibility that he could almost " die of a rose in aromatic ...
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... Edinburgh's unique prestige among literary periodicals , and partly to its political importance as an organ of Whig opinion . ' As an author , ' he told Hobhouse , ' I am cut to atoms by the E [ dinburgh ] Review . It is just out , and ...
... Edinburgh's unique prestige among literary periodicals , and partly to its political importance as an organ of Whig opinion . ' As an author , ' he told Hobhouse , ' I am cut to atoms by the E [ dinburgh ] Review . It is just out , and ...
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... Edinburgh's approval ; and he was gratified in 1814 to find his and Moore's poetic merits being canvassed in a Java gazette which Murray sent him . ( " There is fame for you at six and twenty ! ' he commented in 1821 . ' Alexander had ...
... Edinburgh's approval ; and he was gratified in 1814 to find his and Moore's poetic merits being canvassed in a Java gazette which Murray sent him . ( " There is fame for you at six and twenty ! ' he commented in 1821 . ' Alexander had ...
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... Edinburgh.13 Byron himself was never to return to England , and from 1816 onwards his attitude to his public was more ambivalent even than before : still eager , still con- tinually striving for fame and popular success , he felt ...
... Edinburgh.13 Byron himself was never to return to England , and from 1816 onwards his attitude to his public was more ambivalent even than before : still eager , still con- tinually striving for fame and popular success , he felt ...
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... Edinburgh , Quarterly , and an occasional Blackwood , or now and then a Monthly Review ; for the rest I do not feel curiosity enough to look beyond their covers . ' 22 He was not wholly consistent about this-- consistency was never one ...
... Edinburgh , Quarterly , and an occasional Blackwood , or now and then a Monthly Review ; for the rest I do not feel curiosity enough to look beyond their covers . ' 22 He was not wholly consistent about this-- consistency was never one ...
Contenido
1 | |
27 | |
33 | |
35 | |
The Giaour June 1813 The Bride of Abydos December 1813 The Corsair February 1814 Lara August 1814 The Siege of Corinth and Parisina Febru... | 53 |
November 1816 | 81 |
June 1817 | 111 |
February 1818 | 121 |
April 1818 | 131 |
181924 | 159 |
December 1821 | 207 |
October 1822 | 249 |
Don Juan 181924 | 253 |
Bibliography | 506 |
Select Index | 507 |
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Términos y frases comunes
admiration appear beauty Blackwood's Magazine Byron's poetry Cain character Childe Harold Childe Harold's Pilgrimage Coleridge contemporaries Corsair criticism delight Don Juan dramatic Edinburgh Edinburgh Review effect emotions England English English poetry evil expression Extract from letter eyes fame feeling genius Giaour Goethe heart Henry Crabb Robinson hero human imagination imitation intellectual interest John Keats language least less literary literature living Lord Byron Manfred Marino Faliero melancholy merit mind misanthropy modern moral Murray nature never noble opinion passages passion Percy Bysshe Shelley perhaps person poem poet poetical political popular praise present prose readers romantic satire scene scorn Scott seems sense sentiments Shakespeare Shelley Siege of Corinth sorrow soul Southey spirit stanzas style sublime sympathy talents taste things thought tion true truth verse versification Vision of Judgment vulgar whole words Wordsworth writing written wrote