Byron: Romantic Paradox |
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Page 64
Byron's dissatisfaction , apart from his love of classicism and his naturally pugnacious independence , was largely a dislike of certain trends in style . The romantics , by and large , claimed to do great things , and when they failed ...
Byron's dissatisfaction , apart from his love of classicism and his naturally pugnacious independence , was largely a dislike of certain trends in style . The romantics , by and large , claimed to do great things , and when they failed ...
Page 65
style , which is a mixture of all the styles of the day , which are all bombastic ... is neither English nor poetry . ” 67 Byron is careful to distinguish in his reply to Bowles between the greater romantics , Burns , Chatterton ...
style , which is a mixture of all the styles of the day , which are all bombastic ... is neither English nor poetry . ” 67 Byron is careful to distinguish in his reply to Bowles between the greater romantics , Burns , Chatterton ...
Page 192
He always showed the tendency to adopt a style suggested by the works of another . In English Bards , it had been the style of Gifford and Churchill , rather than of Pope ; in Childe Harold , that of the Spenserian stanza , in many ...
He always showed the tendency to adopt a style suggested by the works of another . In English Bards , it had been the style of Gifford and Churchill , rather than of Pope ; in Childe Harold , that of the Spenserian stanza , in many ...
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