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A Critic in Pall Mall: Being Extracts from Reviews and Miscellanies cover

A Critic in Pall Mall: Being Extracts from Reviews and Miscellanies

Chapter 43: Footnotes:
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About This Book

A collection of incisive essays and reviews that examine literature, drama, art, and cultural life. The critic offers close readings of poets and playwrights, assessments of theatrical productions and translations, and reflections on novels, criticism, and decorative arts. Short, stand-alone pieces range from formal analysis to aphoristic commentary, addressing figures from Romantic and contemporary writers and topics such as dramatic theory, aesthetic principles, and popular taste. Together the pieces reveal a consistent concern with style, beauty, and the critic’s role in interpreting art.

 

Printed by T. and A. Constable, Printers to His Majesty
at the Edinburgh University Press

Footnotes:

[2]  Reverently some well-meaning persons have placed a marble slab on the wall of the cemetery with a medallion-profile of Keats on it and some mediocre lines of poetry.  The face is ugly, and rather hatchet-shaped, with thick sensual lips, and is utterly unlike the poet himself, who was very beautiful to look upon.  ‘His countenance,’ says a lady who saw him at one of Hazlitt’s lectures, ‘lives in my mind as one of singular beauty and brightness; it had the expression as if he had been looking on some glorious sight.’  And this is the idea which Severn’s picture of him gives.  Even Haydon’s rough pen-and-ink sketch of him is better than this ‘marble libel,’ which I hope will soon be taken down.  I think the best representation of the poet would be a coloured bust, like that of the young Rajah of Koolapoor at Florence, which is a lovely and lifelike work of art.

[5]  ‘Make’ is of course a mere printer’s error for ‘mock,’ and was subsequently corrected by Lord Houghton.  The sonnet as given in The Garden of Florence reads ‘orbs for ‘those.’

[63]  The Margravine of Baireuth and Voltaire.  (David Stott, 1888.)

[115]  September 1888.

[116]  See The Picture of Dorian Gray, chapter xi., page 222.

[157]  From Lady Wilde’ Ancient Legends of Ireland.