Byron: Romantic Paradox |
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Page 91
“ The mind of Lord Byron was like a volcano , full of fire and wealth , sometimes calm , often dazzling and playful , but ever threatening . It ran swift as the lightning from one subject to another , and occasionally burst forth in ...
“ The mind of Lord Byron was like a volcano , full of fire and wealth , sometimes calm , often dazzling and playful , but ever threatening . It ran swift as the lightning from one subject to another , and occasionally burst forth in ...
Page 136
What introduces the diversity among the works of his different periods , is that he had so many selves to express , that sometimes one of them is uppermost and sometimes another , and that different theories of poetry and caprices of ...
What introduces the diversity among the works of his different periods , is that he had so many selves to express , that sometimes one of them is uppermost and sometimes another , and that different theories of poetry and caprices of ...
Page 183
Sometimes the humor is unconvincing , as has been noted in respect to Cantos VII and VIII ; the puns are forced , or the incongruence does not ring true . Such failure , however , is the exception , not the rule ; it is but the weather ...
Sometimes the humor is unconvincing , as has been noted in respect to Cantos VII and VIII ; the puns are forced , or the incongruence does not ring true . Such failure , however , is the exception , not the rule ; it is but the weather ...
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