The Romantics Reviewed: Contemporary Reviews of British Romantic Writers. Part C: Shelley, Keats and London Radical Writers - Volume IIFirst published in 1972, this volume contains contemporary British periodical reviews of Shelley, Keats and London Radical Writers, including William Godwin, Leigh Hunt and Mary Shelley, in publications from Gentleman’s Magazine to the Theological Inquirer. Introductions to each periodical provide brief sketches of each publication as well as names, dates and bibliographical information. Headnotes offer bibliographical data of the reviews and suggested approaches to studying them. This book will be of interest to those studying the Romantics and English literature. |
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Page 466
That this plan is not 50 trpian as your correspondent suppuses , may be proved from the cration of character wich Visionary lal ; ours lave alreadly proced both at lione and abroad . What produced the vast alteraiion !
That this plan is not 50 trpian as your correspondent suppuses , may be proved from the cration of character wich Visionary lal ; ours lave alreadly proced both at lione and abroad . What produced the vast alteraiion !
Page 475
It Beatrice had thought in this manner , she would have been wiser and better ; but she would never have been a tragic character : the few whom such an exhibition would have interested , could nerer have been suficiently interested for ...
It Beatrice had thought in this manner , she would have been wiser and better ; but she would never have been a tragic character : the few whom such an exhibition would have interested , could nerer have been suficiently interested for ...
Page 476
Mr. Shelley says that he has " endeavoured as nearly as possible to represent the characters as they really were , and has sought to avoid the error of making them actuated by his own conceptions of right or wrong , false or true ...
Mr. Shelley says that he has " endeavoured as nearly as possible to represent the characters as they really were , and has sought to avoid the error of making them actuated by his own conceptions of right or wrong , false or true ...
Page 477
If any feeling less great and spiritual , any dread of a pettier pain , appears at last to be suffered by the author to mingle with it , a little common frailty and inconsistency only renders the character more human ...
If any feeling less great and spiritual , any dread of a pettier pain , appears at last to be suffered by the author to mingle with it , a little common frailty and inconsistency only renders the character more human ...
Page 479
... of the work again falls in with the character of our miscellany ; part of the object of which is to relate the stories of old times . We shall therefore abridge into prose the stories which Mr. Keats has told in poetry , only making ...
... of the work again falls in with the character of our miscellany ; part of the object of which is to relate the stories of old times . We shall therefore abridge into prose the stories which Mr. Keats has told in poetry , only making ...
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The Romantics Reviewed: Contemporary Reviews of British Romantic ..., Volume 2 Donald H. Reiman No preview available - 2017 |
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