Byron: Romantic Paradox |
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Page 106
The declaration marks a shift in interests , that is at the culmination of a period . The travels in the Near East are far more deeply important than a mere whim of the poet's put into effect ; they had a profounder result than merely ...
The declaration marks a shift in interests , that is at the culmination of a period . The travels in the Near East are far more deeply important than a mere whim of the poet's put into effect ; they had a profounder result than merely ...
Page 121
Were I to try , I could make nothing of any other subject , and that I have apparently exhausted . 49 The passages suggest two reactions of Byron toward the poetry of this his middle period : he was pleased and he was displeased with it ...
Were I to try , I could make nothing of any other subject , and that I have apparently exhausted . 49 The passages suggest two reactions of Byron toward the poetry of this his middle period : he was pleased and he was displeased with it ...
Page 136
a a cantos of Childe Harold , the two poems with which his greatest period may be said to begin . It is a commonplace to say that Byron , in these years , was casting about for that form which should express his complete personality and ...
a a cantos of Childe Harold , the two poems with which his greatest period may be said to begin . It is a commonplace to say that Byron , in these years , was casting about for that form which should express his complete personality and ...
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