About This Book
The essay analyzes the poet's complex political and aesthetic persona, arguing that aristocratic origins coexisted with a powerful revolutionary appeal across Europe. It traces his influence in stirring popular and intellectual sympathy for freedom, compares his political grandeur to that of major dramatists, and contrasts an objective, theatrical melancholy with the deeper subjective despair found in some contemporaries. The critic attributes apparent cynicism to reactionary pressures and intellectual insufficiency, notes recurring ethical poverty and a lack of concrete ideas, and emphasizes a commanding sense of historical continuity and public action that gives many of his passages their enduring force.
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