The Cambridge History of English Literature, Volume 12Sir Adolphus William Ward, Alfred Rayney Waller University Press, 1970 - English literature |
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Page 41
... satire is , indeed , the Dunciad of romanticism . Its undiscriminating attack upon almost every member of the romantic school is accompanied by an equally undiscriminating laudation of Dryden and Pope , together with those poets of ...
... satire is , indeed , the Dunciad of romanticism . Its undiscriminating attack upon almost every member of the romantic school is accompanied by an equally undiscriminating laudation of Dryden and Pope , together with those poets of ...
Page 52
... satire once more comes into full play : it is no longer the formal satire of the Augustan school , such as he had essayed in English Bards and Scotch Reviewers , but burlesque satire , unconstrained and whimsical , and delighting in the ...
... satire once more comes into full play : it is no longer the formal satire of the Augustan school , such as he had essayed in English Bards and Scotch Reviewers , but burlesque satire , unconstrained and whimsical , and delighting in the ...
Page 54
... Satire , ' but , in the earlier cantos , at least , the satire is often held in suspense ; in the ' Ave Maria ' stanzas and the magnificent ' Isles of Greece ' song , he gives free play to his lyricism , while , in his Juan - Haidée ...
... Satire , ' but , in the earlier cantos , at least , the satire is often held in suspense ; in the ' Ave Maria ' stanzas and the magnificent ' Isles of Greece ' song , he gives free play to his lyricism , while , in his Juan - Haidée ...
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