ByronNorthcote House, 2000 - 86 ページ After Shakespeare the most famous British author in Europe, in Britain Byron was for years either neglected, or a victim of the myth of his own personality. Now he is read and studied both for his complex politics and as a forerunner of many of the ideas and techniques more usually associated with post-modernism. Bone tackles the critical problems both of the populism of much of Byron's early work, and conversely of the sophisticated comedy of Beppo, Don Juan and The Vision of Judgement. He argues that for all its contradictoriness Byron's poetic mind develops organically, and that the scintillating technique of the late works grow out of the profoundly modern world-view, relativistic and secular, which had developed through his early years. Byron's writing are seen as a vital area for post-ideological and new found criticism. |
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... Greece , he had an escapade of a different kind , when – to put it simply - an affair nearly led to a duel . This would not be his last brush with this turn of events either . en - The travellers disembarked in Patras , on the western ...
... Greece ! Change thy lords , thy state is still the same ; Thy glorious day is o'er , but not thine years of shame . ( CHII.76.1-2 , 8–9 ) The recovery of the memories of ' our earliest dreams ' - the tales of classical Greece learnt in ...
... Greece is easier to evaluate . In both places there was a preliminary task to be done , the morality of which was simple - the removal of an occupying power . Only when he became involved in the succeeding question - ' then what ...