Nineteenth-Century Literature CriticismGale, 2004 - 528 sider Here is a convenient source of commentary on the careers and works of acclaimed poets, novelists, short story writers, dramatists and philosophers who died between 1800 and 1899. Each volume presents overviews of four to eight authors with chronologically arranged criticism representing the entire range of response to each author. Entries typically include an author portrait, an introduction to the author, a primary bibliography, annotated criticism and an annotated list of further reading sources. Approximately 90-95% of critical essays are full text. Every fourth volume is a Topics volume covering major literary movements, trends and other topics related to nineteenth-century literature. Volumes include author, nationality, topic and title indexes; a cumulative title index to the entire series is published separately. |
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Side 213
... final observation concerning death proves her failure to accept the possibility of an afterlife and her ultimate de- spair : " rock me to the sleep from which none wake ” ( V. iv . 115-118 ) . Beatrice admits " my heart is cold " ; she ...
... final observation concerning death proves her failure to accept the possibility of an afterlife and her ultimate de- spair : " rock me to the sleep from which none wake ” ( V. iv . 115-118 ) . Beatrice admits " my heart is cold " ; she ...
Side 219
... final act , Beatrice is com- placent and awesomely self - satisfied . She has not committed parricide ; her God is just and vengeful of wrongs . Psychologically , her security is comparable to that which Macbeth derives from his literal ...
... final act , Beatrice is com- placent and awesomely self - satisfied . She has not committed parricide ; her God is just and vengeful of wrongs . Psychologically , her security is comparable to that which Macbeth derives from his literal ...
Side 263
... final embrace with his daughter es- tablishes a perfect union of moral and spiritual dark- ness , an intimacy far greater than the obscure act of incest which generated and preceded it . Let us recall the Count's strange irresolution at ...
... final embrace with his daughter es- tablishes a perfect union of moral and spiritual dark- ness , an intimacy far greater than the obscure act of incest which generated and preceded it . Let us recall the Count's strange irresolution at ...
Innhold
Robert Schumann 18101856 | 63 |
Percy Bysshe Shelley 17921822 | 149 |
Frank J Webb 1828?1894? | 322 |
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AAYA action aesthetic African Americans AITN AMWS audience Beatrice Cenci Beatrice's BPFB BRWS CAAS CANR CDALB CDBLB CDWLB character Charlie CMLC Count Cenci criticism Cromarty DAM DRAM DAM MST DAM MULT DAM NOV DAM POET DAM POP death DLBY drama Edinburgh Ellis essay evil father Garies geology Giacomo Hugh Miller imagination incest Irish Jean Paul John language Leipzig literary literature LMFS Lucretia MAICYA Mary ment moral MTCW murder Musik natural history NCLC novel NZfM Old Red Sandstone Orsino parricide Percy Bysshe Shelley Philadelphia play poetic poetry political Preface Prometheus Unbound reading representation RGAL RGEL RGSF RGWL riot Robert Schumann Romantic SATA scene Schu Shel Shelley's SSFS Stevens story SUFW TCLC tion tragedy University Press Walters Webb Webb's WLIT writing York