Byron: Wrath and RhymeAlan Norman Bold, Alan Bold Vision, 1983 - 216 pages Byron has been a notoriously difficult poet to place and the variety of the man is celebrated in this collection of essays, each of which illuminates and explores a crucial Byronic issue. Tom Scott discusses Byron as a Scottish poet; Walter Perrie investigates the Byronic philosophy, the composer Ronald Stevenson presents Byron as lyricist; J. Drummond Bone dwells on the idea of freedom in Byron; Jenni Calder writes on Byron and women; Edwin Morgan offers a piece entitled "Voice, Tone and Transition in Don Juan;" J. F. Hendry writes on Byron and the cult of personality; Geoffrey Carnall writes on Byron and role of the intellectual; and Philip Hobsbaum offers a study of Byron and the English tradition. |
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Page 64
... reader of Don Juan , if he is pondering the speaker's cate- gorizing of it as an epic , that one way to accept the category is to see it as a ' true ' epic , its material firmly based in the British and Mediterranean world of the period ...
... reader of Don Juan , if he is pondering the speaker's cate- gorizing of it as an epic , that one way to accept the category is to see it as a ' true ' epic , its material firmly based in the British and Mediterranean world of the period ...
Page 77
... reader , and from that to straight narrative pathos in a very plain style in the concluding stanza . At the end of the carnage , when the Russians have at last taken Ismail , and Suwarrow has sent back his boastful and blasphemous ...
... reader , and from that to straight narrative pathos in a very plain style in the concluding stanza . At the end of the carnage , when the Russians have at last taken Ismail , and Suwarrow has sent back his boastful and blasphemous ...
Page 180
... reader's question ' What is this passage doing here ? ' , but more seriously to present as random and free a scene ... reader as the hero of a mythic structure . Far from remaining himself for the reader at the crucial moment when he ...
... reader's question ' What is this passage doing here ? ' , but more seriously to present as random and free a scene ... reader as the hero of a mythic structure . Far from remaining himself for the reader at the crucial moment when he ...
Contents
Contents | 7 |
Byron as a Scottish Poet by Tom Scott | 17 |
Byron and the English Tradition | 37 |
Copyright | |
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accept Annabella Milbanke Augusta Augusta Leigh beauty Beppo Bride of Abydos Busoni Byron's letters Byronic hero cant Canto Caroline character Childe Harold composer convention Corsair course critical cult of personality digression Don Juan Edinburgh Eliot English epic essay fact feeling flyting freedom Frere friends Giaour Goethe Greek heart heroic Hobhouse human Ibid ideal J. F. HENDRY Lady Letter to Murray Letters and Journals literary literature lived London Lord lover lyric Manfred Marchand marriage McGann meaning ment Merivale mind moral Napoleon nature never o'er ottava rima outcast passion perhaps poem poet poetic poetry political Pope Pulci Read reader rhetoric rhyme Romantic satire Scots Scott Scottish seems Selim sense sexual Shelley Siege of Corinth social society soul Southey spirit stanza T. S. Eliot Teresa thee theme things thought tion tradition Turkish verse vision Vuillamy W. H. Auden women words Wordsworth writing wrote