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 2
... later gave her a sense of kinship with Schiller and Rousseau , and Elizabeth Gaskell's Unitarian upbringing contributed to the affinity she later felt with Wordsworth and Carlyle . For the great Victorian novelists , the literary past ...
... later gave her a sense of kinship with Schiller and Rousseau , and Elizabeth Gaskell's Unitarian upbringing contributed to the affinity she later felt with Wordsworth and Carlyle . For the great Victorian novelists , the literary past ...
Page 79
... later years , however , he denied being " made for what you call a politician , and should never have adhered to any party . " The " intrigues " and " contests for power " that Disraeli delighted in Byron professed disgust for . ) 15 ...
... later years , however , he denied being " made for what you call a politician , and should never have adhered to any party . " The " intrigues " and " contests for power " that Disraeli delighted in Byron professed disgust for . ) 15 ...
Page 204
... later serves as Lydgate's " basil plant " ) . A terror of some de- monic presence within her , abetted by the Evangelical mistrust of the will , drove her to the repeated use of melodrama in order to articulate that dread in her fiction ...
... later serves as Lydgate's " basil plant " ) . A terror of some de- monic presence within her , abetted by the Evangelical mistrust of the will , drove her to the repeated use of melodrama in order to articulate that dread in her fiction ...
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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achieve allowed artist become belief Bulwer Byron called career Carlyle Carlyle's chap characters Charlotte Brontë child claims created creative Critical death desire devotion Dickens Dickens's Disraeli Disraeli's domestic duty early effect Elizabeth Gaskell energy England English example expression fact faith father feeling figure force Gaskell Gaskell's genius George Eliot heart hero heroine human ideal imagination Impulse in Victorian individual influence Italy Jane John lack later less Letters Lewes literary live London look Mary Meredith mind moral nature never Notes novel novelist passion past perhaps poet poetry political reader realistic reality reflects reprinted Review role Romantic Impulse Romanticism says scene Scott seems seen sense Shelley shows social spirit sympathy theme things thought tion Trollope Trollope's truth turned University Press values Victorian Fiction vols woman women Wordsworth Wordsworthian writing York young youthful