Poetry of Opposition and Revolution: Dryden to WordsworthClarendon Press, 1996 - 272 pages This is a major study of the relation between poetry and politics from the 1688 Revolution to the early years of the nineteenth century, focusing in particular on the works of Dryden, Pope, Johnson, and Wordsworth. Building on his argument in Poetry and the Realm of Politics: Shakespeare to Dryden (also available from OUP), Erskine-Hill argues that the major tradition of political allusion is not, as has often been argued, that of political allegory and overtly political poems, but rather a more shifting and less systematic practice, often involving equivocal or multiple reference. |
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Page 31
... Writers are no exception to this rule . In the event of a second Restoration , Congreve would have as much to gain as Dryden now . Dryden's retrospect on English writing before and after the civil wars , expressed in part through the ...
... Writers are no exception to this rule . In the event of a second Restoration , Congreve would have as much to gain as Dryden now . Dryden's retrospect on English writing before and after the civil wars , expressed in part through the ...
Page 106
... writers and publishers are as much a metaphor for human littleness as objects of satire in their own right , but the poem's concern for the condition of literature is a part of its tenacious Augustan ideal . The twin concerns with writing ...
... writers and publishers are as much a metaphor for human littleness as objects of satire in their own right , but the poem's concern for the condition of literature is a part of its tenacious Augustan ideal . The twin concerns with writing ...
Page 118
... writing to Swift after the publication of the Epistle , the lines were discussed at the Privy Council when the ... writers as Augustus had preferred the older writers of Rome . The implied hearer of Pope's discourse is , perhaps , a ...
... writing to Swift after the publication of the Epistle , the lines were discussed at the Privy Council when the ... writers as Augustus had preferred the older writers of Rome . The implied hearer of Pope's discourse is , perhaps , a ...
Contents
Drydens Later Plays and Poems | 17 |
Early Poems to The Rape of the Locke | 57 |
The Rape of the Lock to The Dunciad | 77 |
Copyright | |
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Aeneid affairs Alexander Pope Alexander's Feast Alphonso Augustus Belinda Book Britain Cambridge card-game certainly Charles Edward Charles XII Cleomenes Coleridge conquest death Don Sebastian drama Dunciad earlier early eighteenth-century English epic episode Ernest de Selincourt exile fable France French Revolution Furness Abbey George Hanoverian hope horse Howard Erskine-Hill Human Wishes Ibid imitation implications Jacobite James James II John Dryden judgement Juvenal Juvenal's King King Arthur later Letters liberty literary Lock London M. H. Abrams Milton mind moral narrative narrator nature Norton opening opposition Oxford passage peace perhaps play poem poet poet's poetic poetry political allusion Politics of Samuel Pope's Prelude present Prince Charles Queen Ramirez Rape reader restoration revolutionary Robespierre Roman Sacheverell Samson Agonistes Samuel Johnson satire scene seems sense Stuart suggested theme throne tion Tories turn Vanity of Human Veramond viii vision Walpole Whig William Wordsworth Windsor-Forest Wolsey word writing Young