Byron: Romantic Paradox |
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Page 77
... lines on the independence of the poet , which would be more striking were they not at once reminis- cent of Moore , of Pope , and of Burns : When Love's delirium haunts the glowing mind , Limping Decorum lingers far behind . . . . Oh ...
... lines on the independence of the poet , which would be more striking were they not at once reminis- cent of Moore , of Pope , and of Burns : When Love's delirium haunts the glowing mind , Limping Decorum lingers far behind . . . . Oh ...
Page 80
... lines , to be published . . . in a few weeks , with notes , -560 lines of Bosworth Field , and 250 lines of another poem in rhyme , besides half a dozen smaller pieces . " 18 The final product of his ambition , now thoroughly ablaze ...
... lines , to be published . . . in a few weeks , with notes , -560 lines of Bosworth Field , and 250 lines of another poem in rhyme , besides half a dozen smaller pieces . " 18 The final product of his ambition , now thoroughly ablaze ...
Page 115
... lines.29 The opening lines of The Curse of Minerva are transferred bodily to The Corsair , for no better reason than that they are good and ought to be published somewhere.3 Byron , in the romances , was not so much telling a story as ...
... lines.29 The opening lines of The Curse of Minerva are transferred bodily to The Corsair , for no better reason than that they are good and ought to be published somewhere.3 Byron , in the romances , was not so much telling a story as ...
Contents
THE AGE OF REASON | 21 |
REBIRTH | 123 |
DRAMA AND PROPAGANDA | 152 |
Copyright | |
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accepted Addison admired Alfieri appeal Aristotle artistic Astarte audience Bards and Scotch Beppo Byronic hero Cain cantos century character Childe Harold classic common sense composed composition conscience conscious contemporaries criticism dislike Don Juan drama Dunciad effect emotion England English Bards epic expression fame feel friends genius Giaour Gifford Guiccioli Hereafter cited hero heroic couplet Hints from Horace Hobhouse Homer humor Ibid ideal Iliad imagination imitation inspiration Johnson Lady Blessington later Leigh Hunt letters literary Lord Byron Manfred manner Marino Faliero Medwin ment mind models mood Moore moral narrative nature neoclassic ness never passion personality plays poem poet poet's poetic poetry Pope preface principle production reaction reason result rhyme Roger Ingpen romantic Sardanapalus satire Scotch Reviewers sentiment Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's sincerity soul speaks spirit style taste theatre theory things thought tion tone tradition tragedy Trelawny truth Unities verse whole writing written wrote