A study of Walter Pater\u27s work reveals the fact that from childhood he was actuated by an instinctive love of beauty apprehended through the senses and by an innate seriousness bordering almost on melancholy
Pater's fictional writings in 1890 were caught up in a Platonic "dialectic process" with Oscar Wilde...
In 1963 when I was studying Vergil's Aeneid, I became gradually aware that the Trojan leader, so oft...
This essay contends that W.B. Yeats’s quest for beauty in art has far more in common with Walter Pat...
The novel of formation, or the Bildungsroman, is among the most popular types of fiction in Victoria...
This volume includes ten early 2000s articles discussing the writings of Walter Pater especially pay...
Walter Pater’s Marius the Epicurean (1885) may be seen as part of the subgenre of the all but forgot...
In conjunction with Walter Pater’s unfinished manuscript, “Gaudioso, the Second,” recently published...
Originally published in 1967. Monsman undertakes a comprehensive critical analysis of Walter Pater's...
Mario Praz not only introduced the study of Walter Pater to Italian culture and developed an early b...
Pater contributed to the modernization of Classics at Oxford by introducing art and archaeology into...
International audienceThis paper focuses on Walter Pater’s approach of Provençal poetry. Pater assoc...
This provocative study suggests that Pater, usually thought of as a florid prose stylist and second-...
The present article analyses Walter Pater' s novel Marius the Epicurean (1885), focusing particula...
This study starts from the belief that the significance of Pater for criticism has been obscured and...
After graduating from the Literae Humaniores course, which after the mid-nineteenth century came to ...
Pater's fictional writings in 1890 were caught up in a Platonic "dialectic process" with Oscar Wilde...
In 1963 when I was studying Vergil's Aeneid, I became gradually aware that the Trojan leader, so oft...
This essay contends that W.B. Yeats’s quest for beauty in art has far more in common with Walter Pat...
The novel of formation, or the Bildungsroman, is among the most popular types of fiction in Victoria...
This volume includes ten early 2000s articles discussing the writings of Walter Pater especially pay...
Walter Pater’s Marius the Epicurean (1885) may be seen as part of the subgenre of the all but forgot...
In conjunction with Walter Pater’s unfinished manuscript, “Gaudioso, the Second,” recently published...
Originally published in 1967. Monsman undertakes a comprehensive critical analysis of Walter Pater's...
Mario Praz not only introduced the study of Walter Pater to Italian culture and developed an early b...
Pater contributed to the modernization of Classics at Oxford by introducing art and archaeology into...
International audienceThis paper focuses on Walter Pater’s approach of Provençal poetry. Pater assoc...
This provocative study suggests that Pater, usually thought of as a florid prose stylist and second-...
The present article analyses Walter Pater' s novel Marius the Epicurean (1885), focusing particula...
This study starts from the belief that the significance of Pater for criticism has been obscured and...
After graduating from the Literae Humaniores course, which after the mid-nineteenth century came to ...
Pater's fictional writings in 1890 were caught up in a Platonic "dialectic process" with Oscar Wilde...
In 1963 when I was studying Vergil's Aeneid, I became gradually aware that the Trojan leader, so oft...
This essay contends that W.B. Yeats’s quest for beauty in art has far more in common with Walter Pat...