The Romantic fascination with lyric is only matched by the poets’ relentless drive to experiment with and individualise the genre. Lyric’s limits test the creative and critical intelligence of the Romantic poet who asks what poetry can know and how it can know it, and what lyric can do and how it can do it. This article considers the ways in which each poet asks the question of what can lyric do and show how they react with and against a genre that imagines transhistorical existence even as it lives in the loss of the specific moment it would record. Focusing upon Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley, and Keats, I discuss the ways in which the Romantic poets responsible for this idea of ‘the ideal form of “the Romantic lyric”’ manipulated, challenged...
This thesis examines the role of quest in the poetry of Byron, Shelley, and Keats. It argues that as...
FROM THE Greece of Pindar to the Ireland of Yeats, 2,300 years canlecoursing down the riverbed of hi...
This paper argues it is probably unavoidable perceiving the works of Shelley and Keats without putti...
“Lyric Mindedness” recovers conversations between Romantic-era poetics and the science of the embodi...
This chapter examines the lyric in the Romantic period. It consists of an Introduction addressing s...
This thesis examines the conscious amalgamation of conflicting forms in Byron’s verse, and how these...
English romantic poetry has been traditionally conceived as a principal part of the idealism orthodo...
Romantic poetry is striking for the richness and variety of its rhymes. If it is concerned to resist...
The term ‘lyric’ has evolved, been revised, redefined and contested over the centuries. In this fasc...
Love for nature is one of the perennial characteristics perceived in Romantic poetry. English Romant...
Poetry is all but absent from Cultural Studies. Most treatments of the genre tend to focus on canoni...
Abstract: This article is an attempt to explore the lyrical strain in Victorian Poetry1. It has been...
Examining the limits of lyric poetry in the twentieth century opens up questions central to the form...
This thesis shows how the lyric is the chosen poetic mode in the mature work of W.B. Yeats and is a ...
In my thesis, I would like to introduce two prominent characters of the romantic period and through...
This thesis examines the role of quest in the poetry of Byron, Shelley, and Keats. It argues that as...
FROM THE Greece of Pindar to the Ireland of Yeats, 2,300 years canlecoursing down the riverbed of hi...
This paper argues it is probably unavoidable perceiving the works of Shelley and Keats without putti...
“Lyric Mindedness” recovers conversations between Romantic-era poetics and the science of the embodi...
This chapter examines the lyric in the Romantic period. It consists of an Introduction addressing s...
This thesis examines the conscious amalgamation of conflicting forms in Byron’s verse, and how these...
English romantic poetry has been traditionally conceived as a principal part of the idealism orthodo...
Romantic poetry is striking for the richness and variety of its rhymes. If it is concerned to resist...
The term ‘lyric’ has evolved, been revised, redefined and contested over the centuries. In this fasc...
Love for nature is one of the perennial characteristics perceived in Romantic poetry. English Romant...
Poetry is all but absent from Cultural Studies. Most treatments of the genre tend to focus on canoni...
Abstract: This article is an attempt to explore the lyrical strain in Victorian Poetry1. It has been...
Examining the limits of lyric poetry in the twentieth century opens up questions central to the form...
This thesis shows how the lyric is the chosen poetic mode in the mature work of W.B. Yeats and is a ...
In my thesis, I would like to introduce two prominent characters of the romantic period and through...
This thesis examines the role of quest in the poetry of Byron, Shelley, and Keats. It argues that as...
FROM THE Greece of Pindar to the Ireland of Yeats, 2,300 years canlecoursing down the riverbed of hi...
This paper argues it is probably unavoidable perceiving the works of Shelley and Keats without putti...