Essays and ReviewsThis is the most complete one-volume edition of Poe's essays and reviews ever published. Here are all his major writings on the theory of poetry, the art of fiction, and the duties of a critic: "The Rationale of Verse," "The Philosophy of Composition," "The Poetic Principle," and "About Critics and Criticism." Articulating Poe's passion for technical proficiency and his theory of poetic method, these essays show why he so strongly influenced the French symbolists toward the end of nineteenth century and, through them, the poetry of T. S. Eliot and Hart Crane. Included in this collection are Poe's reviews and candid opinions of the leading literary figures of his day: Charles Dickens, Washington Irving, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Percy Shelley, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and Margaret Fuller, among others. Here also are reviews of long-forgotten writers, reviews that are interesting not so much for their subjects as for Poe's unflinching and witty candor. Many of his then controversial judgments have been vindicated by time. Poe particularly relished his prolonged critical war with Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Professor of Modern Languages at Harvard and America's most respected poet of the nineteenth century, whom he accused of conventionality and plagiarism. The skirmishes in this campaign are represented here in full. Poe wrote many articles describing the literary world in which he circulated: "The Literati of New York," the "Editorial Miscellanies" from the Broadway Journal, "Some Secrets of the Magazine Prison-House," and his long-running series "Marginalia." Also included are a wealth of articles on a wide variety of topics: South Sea exploration, cryptography, drama, geography, music, transcendentalism, phrenology, ancient languages, and modern cities. As a reviewer Poe was direct, discriminating, and feared; as an essayist he was alert to any possibility that in literature there might be found a sense of unity missing from life. This volume restores an essential and often neglected part of our literary heritage. LIBRARY OF AMERICA is an independent nonprofit cultural organization founded in 1979 to preserve our nation's literary heritage by publishing, and keeping permanently in print, America's best and most significant writing. The Library of America series includes more than 300 volumes to date, authoritative editions that average 1,000 pages in length, feature cloth covers, sewn bindings, and ribbon markers, and are printed on premium acid-free paper that will last for centuries. |
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Nội dung
LETTER TO B July 1836 | 5 |
THE RATIONALE OF VERSE November 1848 | 26 |
THE POETIC PRINCIPLE October 1850 | 71 |
William Harrison Ainsworth | 101 |
Elizabeth Barrett Browning | 116 |
Euripides | 118 |
Edward Lytton Bulwer | 142 |
Henry F Chorley | 164 |
H Sigourney H F Gould and E F Ellet | 874 |
William Gilmore Simms | 891 |
Elizabeth Oakes Smith | 906 |
Supplement A Reply to Critics | 1019 |
Exordium to Critical Notices | 1027 |
Prospectus of The Stylus | 1033 |
About Critics and Criticism | 1039 |
A Reviewer Reviewed | 1046 |
Henry Cockton | 177 |
J F Dalton | 189 |
Daniel Defoe | 201 |
Henry Duncan | 245 |
The Classical Family Library Euripides 1835 | 248 |
Hall | 261 |
Thomas Hood | 274 |
R H Horne | 289 |
Charles James Lever Harry Lorrequer | 311 |
Frederick Marryatt | 325 |
Robert Southey | 342 |
Sarah Stickney Mrs Sarah Stickney Ellis | 345 |
The American Drama 1845 | 357 |
Bird | 389 |
John G C Brainard | 404 |
William Cullen Bryant | 412 |
The Canons of Good Breeding 1839 | 455 |
James Fenimore Cooper | 473 |
Rufus Dawes | 491 |
Joseph Rodman DrakeFitzGreene Halleck | 505 |
Theodore S | 540 |
Rufus W Griswold | 549 |
Hawks | 557 |
Augustus Baldwin Longstreet | 778 |
William W Lord | 797 |
Cornelius Mathews | 818 |
Morris Mattson | 838 |
Susan Rigby Morgan | 861 |
Literary Small Talk 1839 | 1061 |
EDITORIAL MISCELLANIES FROM THE Broadway Journal | 1067 |
October 4 1845 | 1073 |
October 11 1845 | 1081 |
November 22 1845 | 1093 |
December 13 1845 | 1099 |
December 27 1845 | 1109 |
THE LITERATI OF NEW YORK CITY | 1118 |
Gillespie | 1130 |
Anna Cora Mowatt | 1137 |
Lewis Gaylord Clark | 1204 |
SOUTHSEA EXPEDITION | 1227 |
By J N Reynolds | 1234 |
A Brief Account of the Discoveries and Results of | 1248 |
A Few Words on Secret Writing | 1277 |
Chapter of Suggestions | 1292 |
Democratic Review November 1844 | 1309 |
Democratic Review December 1844 | 1331 |
Godeys Ladys Book August 1845 | 1363 |
Godeys Ladys Book September 1845 | 1370 |
Grahams Magazine March 1846 | 1380 |
Democratic Review April 1846 | 1386 |
Democratic Review July 1846 | 1397 |
Grahams Magazine November 1846 | 1404 |
Grahams Magazine December 1846 | 1413 |
Grahams Magazine January 1848 | 1419 |
Grahams Magazine February 1848 | 1425 |
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Thuật ngữ và cụm từ thông dụng
admiration American appear attempt beauty believe better bring called character composition considered course critic doubt effect equal especially evidence example exist expression eyes fact fall fancy feel force genius give given Graham's Magazine hand head heart idea imagination instance intended interest lady least leaves length less light lines literary living look manner matter means mere merely merit mind Miss nature never night novel object observed once opinion original passage perhaps person poem poet poetical poetry possible present proper question reader reason reference regard remarkable respect rhythm Rudge seems seen sense short soul speak spirit stanza story supposed syllables term thing thou thought tion true truth verse volume whole write written
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The Theory of Architecture: Concepts Themes & Practices Paul-Alan Johnson Xem trước bị giới hạn - 1994 |