About This Book
The collection comprises revised essays that survey the literature of the early Victorian period, offering assessments of its characteristic social emphasis and of the artistic achievement of leading prose writers. An opening essay sketches the era's strengths and limitations—originality, historical reach, and a sociological bent—and the remaining pieces provide critical studies of Carlyle, Macaulay, Disraeli, Thackeray, Dickens, Charlotte Brontë, Kingsley, Trollope, and George Eliot, weighing their themes, methods, and lasting contributions while noting recurring tensions between moral passion, historical perspective, and literary form.
About the Author
You May Also Like
6 picks
"1914"
by John Oxenham
"All's Well"; or, Alice's Victory
by Emily Sarah Holt
"Ask Mamma"; or, The Richest Commoner In England
by Robert Smith Surtees
"Bones": Being Further Adventures in Mr. Commissioner Sanders' Country
by Edgar Wallace
"Captains Courageous": A Story of the Grand Banks
by Rudyard Kipling
"Captains Courageous": A Story of the Grand Banks
by Rudyard Kipling