The Critical Temper: Victorian literature and American literatureMartin Tucker Ungar, 1969 - American literature |
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Page 11
... give it conviction nor the ability to suspend the doubts he feels . Happily , a least , he is not long willing , like a versifying Carlyle , to shout down his own misgivings . But when Arnold speaks in soliloquy that sufficiently ...
... give it conviction nor the ability to suspend the doubts he feels . Happily , a least , he is not long willing , like a versifying Carlyle , to shout down his own misgivings . But when Arnold speaks in soliloquy that sufficiently ...
Page 204
... give The Vision of Sin and The Palace of Art in their entirety ; I should include The Northern Farmer , while rejecting the other dialect poems ; I should give the lyrics from The Princess while omitting the main narrative ; I should ...
... give The Vision of Sin and The Palace of Art in their entirety ; I should include The Northern Farmer , while rejecting the other dialect poems ; I should give the lyrics from The Princess while omitting the main narrative ; I should ...
Page 308
... give his friends and his public what they desired , character- ized his life and his artistic career . The life of English clubs and country- houses evidently demanded nothing which he was not able to give , and his public was ...
... give his friends and his public what they desired , character- ized his life and his artistic career . The life of English clubs and country- houses evidently demanded nothing which he was not able to give , and his public was ...
Contents
Matthew Arnold 18221888 | 3 |
Walter Bagehot 18261877 | 16 |
Elizabeth Barrett Browning 18061861 | 30 |
Copyright | |
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achievement American Literature artist beauty Brontë Browning Browning's Carlyle century character Charles Charlotte Brontë comedy contemporaries criticism death Dickens dramatic dream E. M. W. Tillyard Edward Emerson Emily Emily Dickinson emotion England English Literature Essays experience F. L. Lucas F. R. Leavis feel fiction genius Geoffrey Chaucer George Eliot Hawthorne Henry James Howells human ideal ideas imagination intellectual John letters literary living London Macmillan Mark Twain Matthew Arnold means Meredith mind modern moral nature never novel novelist passion perhaps philosopher poems poet poetic poetry prose published reader religious reprinted by permission Robert romantic Rossetti Ruskin satire sense Shakespeare social society soul spirit story Studies style symbol T. S. Eliot Tennyson Thackeray theme things Thomas Thoreau thought tion tradition tragedy truth University Vernon Louis Parrington verse Victorian vision Walter Whitman William writing wrote