FOOTNOTES:
[1]Life, vol. i. p. 420.
[2]Life, vol. ii. p. 55.
[3]Life, vol. ii. p. 357.
[4]Life, vol. i. p. 314.
[5]Life, vol. i. p. 244.
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A series of essays offers close readings of nineteenth- and eighteenth-century writers and literary topics, treating figures such as Charlotte Brontë, Charles Kingsley, Godwin and Shelley, Gray, Sterne, George Eliot, and Coleridge alongside pieces on country books, autobiography, Carlyle's ethics, and notable state trials. The writer reflects on methods of criticism, advocating a measured, quasi-scientific approach while distinguishing poetic genius from analytic intellect, and explores how intensity, philosophical breadth, and personal temperament shape literary power and public reception. Each essay combines biographical context, thematic analysis, and judgments on artistic scope and influence.
[1]Life, vol. i. p. 420.
[2]Life, vol. ii. p. 55.
[3]Life, vol. ii. p. 357.
[4]Life, vol. i. p. 314.
[5]Life, vol. i. p. 244.