Letters, Journals, and Other Prose Writings of Lord Byron
Author: George Gordon Byron Baron Byron
Publisher:
Published: 1837
Total Pages: 730
ISBN-13:
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Author: George Gordon Byron Baron Byron
Publisher:
Published: 1837
Total Pages: 730
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Richard Lansdown
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Published: 2015-04-24
Total Pages: 551
ISBN-13: 0191044768
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAlongside Jane Austen, the Brontë sisters, and Oscar Wilde, Lord Byron possesses a star-quality unlike other classic British authors. His life as poet, philanderer, homosexual, and freedom fighter is legendary, and this new selection from his powerful letters and journals tells the story from the inside, in Byron's own racy and passionate style. Though Byron is chiefly known as a poet, his letters and journals are one of the glories of English prose literature, and one of the greatest British acts of autobiography, alongside Pepys' Diary and Boswell's Journal. This new selection, taken from the authoritative and unbowdlerized edition prepared by Leslie Marchand in the 1970s, not only provides the cream of his informal prose; it amounts to a biography in Byron's own words. No other English writer lived so remarkable an existence, from rented rooms in Aberdeen to a Nottinghamshire peerage, from European fame to English infamy, and notorious Italian exile to a glorious death in the Greek War of Independence.The letters and journals are selected, introduced, and annotated to provide a running narrative of the life and career of his remarkable man in his own unmistakable words.
Author: George Gordon Byron Baron Byron
Publisher:
Published: 1843
Total Pages: 990
ISBN-13:
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Publisher:
Published: 1836
Total Pages: 828
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Samuel Claggett Chew
Publisher: London : J. Murray
Published: 1924
Total Pages: 442
ISBN-13:
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Publisher: Scarecrow Press
Published: 1986
Total Pages: 520
ISBN-13: 9780810818415
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: George Gordon Byron Baron Byron
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Published: 1991
Total Pages: 580
ISBN-13: 9780198185437
DOWNLOAD EBOOKFor the first time all Byron's miscellaneous prose writings are collected together, including his speeches in the House of Lords, short stories, reviews, critical articles, and Armenian translations, as well as such shorter pieces as memoranda, notes, reminiscences, and marginalia. Althoughsome of this material has been published before - most notably in the appendices to Prothero's edition of the Letters and Journals (1898-1901) - a considerable proportion is here published for the first time. For the first time too, the prose works are presented with full scholarly apparatus. The texts are reproduced from their original manuscripts wherever these are still extant; and the notes provide an introduction to each item, detailing the circumstances of its composition, its publicationhistory, and its historical and literary background, as well as providing comprehensive annotation of individual points of obscurity, allusions, and other matters of content.
Author: George Gordon Byron Baron Byron
Publisher:
Published: 1833
Total Pages: 356
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Natalie M. Phillips
Publisher: JHU Press
Published: 2016-09-13
Total Pages: 303
ISBN-13: 1421420139
DOWNLOAD EBOOKEnlightenment writers fiercely debated the nature of distraction in literature. Early novel reading typically conjures images of rapt readers in quiet rooms, but commentators at the time described reading as a fraught activity, one occurring amidst a distracting cacophony that included sloshing chamber pots and wailing street vendors. Auditory distractions were compounded by literary ones as falling paper costs led to an explosion of print material, forcing prose fiction to compete with a dizzying array of essays, poems, sermons, and histories. In Distraction, Natalie M. Phillips argues that prominent Enlightenment authors—from Jane Austen and William Godwin to Eliza Haywood and Samuel Johnson—were deeply engaged with debates about the wandering mind, even if they were not equally concerned about the problem of distractibility. Phillips explains that some novelists in the 1700s—viewing distraction as a dangerous wandering from singular attention that could lead to sin or even madness—attempted to reform diverted readers. Johnson and Haywood, for example, worried that contemporary readers would only focus long enough to “look into the first pages” of essays and novels; Austen offered wry commentary on the issue through the creation of the daft Lydia Bennet, a character with an attention span so short she could listen only “half-a-minute.” Other authors radically redefined distraction as an excellent quality of mind, aligning the multiplicity of divided focus with the spontaneous creation of new thought. Laurence Sterne’s Tristram Shandy, for example, won audiences with its comically distracted narrator and uniquely digressive form. Using cognitive science as a framework to explore the intertwined history of mental states, philosophy, science, and literary forms, Phillips explains how arguments about the diverted mind made their way into the century’s most celebrated literature. She also draws a direct link between the disparate theories of focus articulated in eighteenth-century literature and modern experiments in neuroscience, revealing that contemporary questions surrounding short attention spans are grounded in long conversations over the nature and limits of focus.
Author: George Gordon N. Byron (6th baron.)
Publisher:
Published: 1842
Total Pages: 866
ISBN-13:
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