Byron: Romantic Paradox |
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Page 34
It makes no difference for our purposes that the idea is latent throughout the Age of Reason , and that the germs of it may be traced to the accepted Longinus . With Pope the unsophisticated genius had become a cult , or at least a ...
It makes no difference for our purposes that the idea is latent throughout the Age of Reason , and that the germs of it may be traced to the accepted Longinus . With Pope the unsophisticated genius had become a cult , or at least a ...
Page 36
And so he was accepted by the élite as something more than a rustic divinely inspired . In spite of humble birth , he was received and admired as much as mere literary genius can recommend one to good society .
And so he was accepted by the élite as something more than a rustic divinely inspired . In spite of humble birth , he was received and admired as much as mere literary genius can recommend one to good society .
Page 194
... literary composition , as they had been accepted in the age of Pope . It is not , because it is humorous , necessarily sarcastic , any more than the preface of Martinus Scriblerus to the Dunciad is an attack on neoclassic canons .
... literary composition , as they had been accepted in the age of Pope . It is not , because it is humorous , necessarily sarcastic , any more than the preface of Martinus Scriblerus to the Dunciad is an attack on neoclassic canons .
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