About This Book
A collection of literary essays offers close readings and critical reflections on several eighteenth- and nineteenth-century English and Scottish writers. It opens with a study of William Cowper's correspondence that argues for integrating poems and letters to clarify motive and feeling, and it moves through individual portraits and critical appraisals of poets and novelists. Topics treated include editorial practice, popular taste, national literary traditions, the relation of personal life to artistic style, and questions of form and sentiment. The pieces combine historical detail, formal analysis, and evaluative commentary to map recurring concerns in modern literary criticism.
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