About This Book
A collection of essays offering personal, conversational criticism of contemporary literature, arguing that critics should apply consistent principles while addressing unsettled questions of their own era. Topics range from the rise and dominance of the novel, democracy's influence on letters, and the state of poetry, to assessments of individual writers and movements such as realism, symbolism, and the works of Tennyson, Shelley, Mallarmé, Stevenson, and Kipling. The pieces balance historical perspective with immediate commentary, combine polemic and parable, and close with a satirical Lucianic sketch and reflections on literary institutions and reputation.
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