George Herbert: The Critical HeritageC.A. Patrides Routledge, 31. okt. 2013 - 392 sider First Published in 1995. The Critical Heritage gathers together a large body of critical sources on major figures in literature. Each volume presents contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling students and researchers to read for themselves, for example, comments on early performances of Shakespeare's plays, or reactions to the first publication of Jane Austen's novels. The carefully selected sources range from landmark essays in the history of criticism to journalism and contemporary opinion, and little published documentary material such as letters and diaries. Significant pieces of criticism from later periods are also included, in order to demonstrate the fluctuations in an author's reputation. Each volume contains an introduction to the writer's published works, a selected bibliography, and an index of works, authors and subjects. The Collected Critical Heritage set will be available as a set of 68 volumes and the series will also be available in mini sets selected by period (in slipcase boxes) and as individual volumes. |
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Side v
... tion , discussing the material assembled and relating the early stages of the author's reception to what we have come to identify as the critical tradition . The volumes will make avail- able much material which would otherwise be ...
... tion , discussing the material assembled and relating the early stages of the author's reception to what we have come to identify as the critical tradition . The volumes will make avail- able much material which would otherwise be ...
Side xiv
... tion with Ruskin ; to Mr Gordon Phillips , Archivist of ' The Times ' , for identifying the author of the anonymous essay ( No. 73 ) as Basil de Selincourt ; to Professor John R. Roberts of the University of Missouri at Columbia in ...
... tion with Ruskin ; to Mr Gordon Phillips , Archivist of ' The Times ' , for identifying the author of the anonymous essay ( No. 73 ) as Basil de Selincourt ; to Professor John R. Roberts of the University of Missouri at Columbia in ...
Side xvi
... tion ( Whiteknights Press ) for permission to reprint an extract from the preface to Cardell Goodman's ' Beawty in Raggs ' , ed . R.J. Roberts ( 1958 ) ( No. 6 ) ; the Editor of ' The Times Literary Supplement ' for permission to ...
... tion ( Whiteknights Press ) for permission to reprint an extract from the preface to Cardell Goodman's ' Beawty in Raggs ' , ed . R.J. Roberts ( 1958 ) ( No. 6 ) ; the Editor of ' The Times Literary Supplement ' for permission to ...
Side xix
... tion , 1650-1710 : Good Reading for the Young , ' Notes and Queries ' , CCVII ( 1962 ) , 213 . Joseph H. Summers , Time and ' The Temple ' , in his ' George Herbert : His Religion and Art ' ( Cambridge , Mass . , 1954 ) , Ch . I. Izaak ...
... tion , 1650-1710 : Good Reading for the Young , ' Notes and Queries ' , CCVII ( 1962 ) , 213 . Joseph H. Summers , Time and ' The Temple ' , in his ' George Herbert : His Religion and Art ' ( Cambridge , Mass . , 1954 ) , Ch . I. Izaak ...
Side 2
... tion ventured as recently as 1936 that Herbert is ' a meta- physical poet of the school of Donne with the same undivided consciousness of his tribe ' ( 2 ) informs impli- citly , and often quite explicitly , many of the judgments ...
... tion ventured as recently as 1936 that Herbert is ' a meta- physical poet of the school of Donne with the same undivided consciousness of his tribe ' ( 2 ) informs impli- citly , and often quite explicitly , many of the judgments ...
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1 | |
2 | |
Herbert in the Seventeenth Century | 55 |
JOHN POLWHELE On Mr Herberts Devine poeme | 61 |
RICHARD CRASHAW On Mr G Herberts booke | 67 |
JOSHUA POOLE from The English Parnassus | 85 |
CHARLES COTTON from To my Old and most | 133 |
JOHN DUNTON ? from the Athenian Mercury | 139 |
JAMES THOMSON On George Herberts Poems | 226 |
JOHN NICHOL from his introduction to The Poeti | 259 |
GEORGE MACDONALD George Herbert | 265 |
GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS from a letter to R | 274 |
WILLIAM ALEXANDER from his introduction | 280 |
GEORGE HERBERT PALMER from Formative Types | 290 |
PAUL ELMER MORE from George Herbert | 298 |
A G HYDE from George Herbert and his Times | 308 |
or Herberts | 145 |
GILES JACOB from An Historical Account | 158 |
HENRY HEADLEY from Select Beauties of Ancient | 164 |
vii | 173 |
RALPH WALDO EMERSON from the journals | 174 |
GEORGE ELIOT from a letter 1841 | 180 |
ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH from a lecture c 1850 | 194 |
GEORGE GILFILLAN from his introduction to The | 207 |
JOHN KEBLE from a lecture 1854 | 218 |
FRANCIS THOMPSON George Herbert in | 316 |
A CLUTTONBROCK from More Essays on Books | 323 |
HERBERT J C GRIERSON from his introduction | 329 |
BASIL DE SELINCOURT George Herbert in The | 336 |
AUSTIN WARREN from George Herbert in Ameri | 348 |
APPENDIX I | 357 |
APPENDIX II | 374 |
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