Literature of the Romantic Period, 1750-1850Reginald Thorne Davies, Bernard G. Beatty Barnes & Noble Books, 1976 - 212 pages |
Contents
Blakes Songs of Innocence and | 19 |
an aspect of Wordsworth | 36 |
Narrative modes in the Waverley Novels | 56 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Alastor Arnold attitude Barnaby Rudge beauty Blake Blake's Blake's Songs Boswell Byron century character Childe Harold's Pilgrimage Coleridge Coleridge's contemporaries critical Dickens Dickens's Don Juan drama dramatists dream Dryden Dunciad Edinburgh Edinburgh Review eighteenth eighteenth-century Elizabethan Endymion English poetry essay example Fanny Fanny's feeling fictional Gothic Hazlitt heart historical Holy Thursday human Hymns images imagination imitation Jane Austen John Johnson Journey Keats Keats's kind language Letters literary literature London Lyrical Mask of Anarchy mind modern moral nature novel novelistic Oxford passage past Pedlar period poetic poets political precedent Preface Prose reader Redgauntlet reprinted Review Romantic Romanticism Ruined Cottage satire Scott seems sense Sense and Sensibility sensibility Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's simply Songs of Innocence Spenser Spenserian stanza style suggests taste tenderness Tennyson theme thought tion tradition tragedy Victorian poetry viewpoint vision Waverley Waverley novels words Wordsworth writing
References to this book
The Fictions of Romantick Chivalry: Samuel Johnson and Romance Eithne Henson No preview available - 1992 |