Byron: Romantic Paradox |
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Page 152
CHAPTER VII DRAMA AND PROPAGANDA I T is well to read the dramas immediately after Childe Harold.1 Don Juan is so informed , so overlaid and so incrusted with the comic that its style seems at times the work of another craftsman ...
CHAPTER VII DRAMA AND PROPAGANDA I T is well to read the dramas immediately after Childe Harold.1 Don Juan is so informed , so overlaid and so incrusted with the comic that its style seems at times the work of another craftsman ...
Page 157
14 The wisdom of the choice must be determined according to one's opinion of closet drama as a permissible artistic form . To Byron , the advantages must have seemed immediate and striking . He was freed for once from the necessity of ...
14 The wisdom of the choice must be determined according to one's opinion of closet drama as a permissible artistic form . To Byron , the advantages must have seemed immediate and striking . He was freed for once from the necessity of ...
Page 160
Whereas the Elizabethan drama had been the product of practical playwrights working in a narrow local medium , the Continental had developed more as a form of art , with definite ideals of composition . The contrast was not altogether ...
Whereas the Elizabethan drama had been the product of practical playwrights working in a narrow local medium , the Continental had developed more as a form of art , with definite ideals of composition . The contrast was not altogether ...
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accepted action admired affected appeal artistic Bards Blessington Byron cantos century character Childe Harold classic common complete composed composition conscious criticism direct Don Juan drama emotion English entirely epic experience expression fact feel final friends genius give hand humor Ibid idea ideal imagination immediate individual inspiration intention Italy lack largely later least less letters literary living look Lord Manfred manner merely mind models mood moral nature never object once opinion original passion past perhaps period personality plays poem poet poetic poetry Pope practical preface present principle production reading reason result Reviewers romantic Rules satire seems sense sentiment Shelley side sincerity sometimes speaks spirit stage style taste theory things thought tion tone tradition tragedies true truth turn verse whole writing written wrote