The Romantic Impulse in Victorian FictionMr. Stone takes an innovative approach to the Victorian novelists, examining their debt to the writers of the previous generation. Confronting the diversity of the Romantic movement and of the Victorians' responses to it, he discovers strong and unexpected affinities between the novelists and the Romantics. |
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Page 341
... Charlotte Brontë differs most from Emily is precisely in this impulse to negotiate passionate self - fulfilment on terms which preserve the social and moral conventions intact . " 3. Margaret Blom , Charlotte Brontë ( Boston : Twayne ...
... Charlotte Brontë differs most from Emily is precisely in this impulse to negotiate passionate self - fulfilment on terms which preserve the social and moral conventions intact . " 3. Margaret Blom , Charlotte Brontë ( Boston : Twayne ...
Page 343
... Charlotte Brontë ( Athens : Ohio University Press , 1969 ) , p . 83 , Brontë's use of the irreverent Charles Wellesley to narrate the tales may have been a conscious attempt to keep her distance from Angria . 22. " The Duke of Zamorna ...
... Charlotte Brontë ( Athens : Ohio University Press , 1969 ) , p . 83 , Brontë's use of the irreverent Charles Wellesley to narrate the tales may have been a conscious attempt to keep her distance from Angria . 22. " The Duke of Zamorna ...
Page 346
... Charlotte Brontë , p . 197 ) . It is curious that the paranoid per- spective of Villette can be interpreted as a ... Charlotte Bronte : A Psychosexual Study of Her Novels ( London : Victor Gollancz , 1973 ) . Perhaps con- fusing ...
... Charlotte Brontë , p . 197 ) . It is curious that the paranoid per- spective of Villette can be interpreted as a ... Charlotte Bronte : A Psychosexual Study of Her Novels ( London : Victor Gollancz , 1973 ) . Perhaps con- fusing ...
Contents
ONE Introduction | 1 |
TWO Trollope Byron and the Conventionalities | 46 |
THREE Benjamin Disraeli and the Romance of the Will | 74 |
Copyright | |
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