The Literary Relationship of Lord Byron & Thomas MooreJohns Hopkins University Press, 2001 - 251 էջ Contradicting the popular perception that Percy Bysshe Shelley was the poet who exerted the most influence upon Lord Byron's work, Jeffery W. Vail demonstrates that close friend and biographer Thomas Moore was a larger presence in Byron's life and work than any other living writer. In this analysis, Vail reconstructs the social, political and literary contexts of both writers' works through extensive consultation of 19th-century sources - including hundreds of contemporary reviews and articles on the two writers and over 500 unpublished manuscript letters written by Moore. |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 83–ի 1-ից 3-ը:
Էջ 1
... Literary Eclogue in which the two primary characters are thinly disguised versions of himself and Thomas Moore . In this poem Byron attempted to re - create imaginatively the lost world of his youthful fame in Regency London in the ...
... Literary Eclogue in which the two primary characters are thinly disguised versions of himself and Thomas Moore . In this poem Byron attempted to re - create imaginatively the lost world of his youthful fame in Regency London in the ...
Էջ 42
... literary scene to refer to their similar subject matter and partisan mo- tivation . Byron's dedication of The Corsair to Moore in 1814 ensured that Byron's declaration of his own poetical Whiggism occurred in the specific context of his ...
... literary scene to refer to their similar subject matter and partisan mo- tivation . Byron's dedication of The Corsair to Moore in 1814 ensured that Byron's declaration of his own poetical Whiggism occurred in the specific context of his ...
Էջ 209
... Literary Recreations , and the Universal Magazine all treated the volume as a collection of chiefly amatory poems . 31. Review of Hours of Idleness , in Universal Magazine , 2d ser . , 8 ( 1807 ) : 235-37 . 32. Review of Hours of ...
... Literary Recreations , and the Universal Magazine all treated the volume as a collection of chiefly amatory poems . 31. Review of Hours of Idleness , in Universal Magazine , 2d ser . , 8 ( 1807 ) : 235-37 . 32. Review of Hours of ...
Բովանդակություն
ONE In short a young Moore | 14 |
TWO Our political malice | 41 |
THREE Thats my thunder by Gd | 81 |
Հեղինակային իրավունք | |
7 այլ բաժինները չեն ցուցադրվում
Common terms and phrases
actually Angels appeared attacks attempt Augusta become beginning believe biography Byron and Moore called character claimed closely collection considered critics dedication early Edinburgh edition England English epistles evidence expressed fact February feeling felt give Hunt imagination imitation important included influence Ireland Irish Irish Melodies January Jeffrey John journal known Lady Lalla Rookh late later least less letter lines literary Little Little's London Lord Byron Lord John Russell lyric Magazine March Mary Melodies memoirs mind Moore's poem Murray nature never observed oriental original perhaps Poetical poetry poets political popular Power present printed probably published readers recalled referred Regent remarks Review Romantic satire seems Shelley songs story style success suggested thing Thomas Moore thought told verse volume Whig writing written wrote York young