Disowned by Memory: Wordsworth's Poetry of the 1790sUniversity of Chicago Press, 2000 M04 15 - 186 páginas Although we know him as one of the greatest English poets, William Wordsworth might not have become a poet at all without the experience of personal and historical catastrophe in his youth. In Disowned by Memory, David Bromwich connects the accidents of Wordsworth's life with the originality of his writing, showing how the poet's strong sympathy with the political idealism of the age and with the lives of the outcast and the dispossessed formed the deepest motive of his writings of the 1790s. "This very Wordsworthian combination of apparently low subjects with extraordinary 'high argument' makes for very rewarding, though often challenging reading."—Kenneth R. Johnston, Washington Times "Wordsworth emerges from this short and finely written book as even stranger than we had thought, and even more urgently our contemporary."—Grevel Lindop, Times Literary Supplement "[Bromwich's] critical interpretations of the poetry itself offer readers unusual insights into Wordworth's life and work."—Library Journal "An added benefit of this book is that it restores our faith that criticism can actually speak to our needs. Bromwich is a rigorous critic, but he is a general one whose insights are broadly applicable. It's an intellectual pleasure to rise to his complexities."—Vijay Seshadri, New York Times Book Review |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 31
Página xi
... cause to sympathy with persons to sympathy with " mute insensate things . " An incitement to think about The Rime of the Ancient Mariner , from Geoffrey Hartman twenty - five years ago , lies behind some pages of chapters 2 and 5 ...
... cause to sympathy with persons to sympathy with " mute insensate things . " An incitement to think about The Rime of the Ancient Mariner , from Geoffrey Hartman twenty - five years ago , lies behind some pages of chapters 2 and 5 ...
Página 2
... cause of the risk . The dream of book 5 of The Prelude is instructive here . The Arab 5 " of the Bedouin tribes " who shows the dreamer the stone and the shell is a man with practical needs like Sancho Panza , but the dreamer regards ...
... cause of the risk . The dream of book 5 of The Prelude is instructive here . The Arab 5 " of the Bedouin tribes " who shows the dreamer the stone and the shell is a man with practical needs like Sancho Panza , but the dreamer regards ...
Página 9
... psychological subtexts , but his mixture of emotions has a plain enough cause if one imagines what it must have been to leave that society , even for that solitude . It was to France and the revolution , and not to mountain climbing 9.
... psychological subtexts , but his mixture of emotions has a plain enough cause if one imagines what it must have been to leave that society , even for that solitude . It was to France and the revolution , and not to mountain climbing 9.
Página 15
... cause . The design of centuries cannot make such feelings , and a determination of a revolutionary calendar cannot unmake them . There is a less abstract explanation for Wordsworth's finding of his subject after a year of despair and ...
... cause . The design of centuries cannot make such feelings , and a determination of a revolutionary calendar cannot unmake them . There is a less abstract explanation for Wordsworth's finding of his subject after a year of despair and ...
Página 17
... causes must have given an undue preponderance to birth , station , rank , and fortune ; and have fixed the election , more than was reasonable , upon those who were most conspicu- ous for these distinctions ; —men whose very virtue ...
... causes must have given an undue preponderance to birth , station , rank , and fortune ; and have fixed the election , more than was reasonable , upon those who were most conspicu- ous for these distinctions ; —men whose very virtue ...
Contenido
Alienation and Belonging to Humanity | 23 |
Political Justice in The Borderers | 44 |
The French Revolution and Tintern Abbey | 69 |
Moral Relations in the Preface and Two Ballads | 92 |
The Trial of Individuality | 110 |
Historical Catastrophe and Personal Memory | 139 |
Conclusion | 175 |
181 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Disowned by Memory: Wordsworth's Poetry of the 1790s David Bromwich Sin vista previa disponible - 1998 |
Términos y frases comunes
action affections Ancient Mariner associated become believe belong Betty Foy Bishop of Llandaff blessing Borderers Burke character childhood Coleridge comes common crime Divine Corporation E. P. Thompson early Excursion experience fear feeling felt France gratitude guilt habit heart hero hope human idea Idiot Boy imagination interest Johnny letter lines living look Lyrical Ballads Macbeth Martha Ray mean memory memory-fragment ment metaphor Michael mind mood moral Mortimer Mortimer's motive murder narrator nature never objects Old Cumberland Beggar once Othello passage Pedlar person Peter Bell pleasure poem poet poet's poetry political Preface Prelude reader reason relation revolution Rivers Ruined Cottage Salisbury Plain scene seems sensation sense sentiment September massacres social society someone soul spirit seal story sublime suffering suggests supposed sympathy tells terror things Thorn thought Tintern Abbey tion turn wander wants William Wordsworth Words Wordsworth worth wrote
Referencias a este libro
Authoring the Self: Print Culture, Poetry, and Self-Representation from Pope ... Scott Hees Sin vista previa disponible - 2004 |
Inscription and Modernity: From Wordsworth to Mandelstam John Kenneth MacKay Vista de fragmentos - 2006 |