Byron and His Fictions |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 81
Page 32
... poem began , but will not be those of a reader of the poem , whom Byron has taught " a lesson of the young " ( II , 91 ) . " He that is lonely , hither let him roam , " the narrator declares , and Greece is therapeutic because by ...
... poem began , but will not be those of a reader of the poem , whom Byron has taught " a lesson of the young " ( II , 91 ) . " He that is lonely , hither let him roam , " the narrator declares , and Greece is therapeutic because by ...
Page 201
... poem is evident . On the surface the poem is a simple narrative of a journey from the western to the eastern end of the Mediterranean . The reader's sense of chronology is more com- plex , however , since the progress eastward is also a ...
... poem is evident . On the surface the poem is a simple narrative of a journey from the western to the eastern end of the Mediterranean . The reader's sense of chronology is more com- plex , however , since the progress eastward is also a ...
Page 221
... poem again in quest for under- standing . Don Juan might have reached a kindred , perfectly satisfac- tory artistic resolution that would have left all the narrator's riddles unanswered . The dynamic of the poem is that as the reader ...
... poem again in quest for under- standing . Don Juan might have reached a kindred , perfectly satisfac- tory artistic resolution that would have left all the narrator's riddles unanswered . The dynamic of the poem is that as the reader ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action allusion already appears attempt Augusta authority becomes Byron Cain called Canto cause character Childe Harold close consciousness continues contrast death described desire Doge Don Juan drama early effect English experience expressed Faliero fall father fears feelings fictions figure final force gives Haidée heart hero hope human imagination Italy Juan's language later less lines look Lord lost Manfred Manfred's marks maternal meaning memory mind mother narrator nature never object once passion past pattern perhaps play poem poet Poetry position present Press psychological reader reality reflects relationship remains representative reveals role Sardanapalus scene seems sense sexual shows situation stanza story suggests thee thing thou thought throughout tion true turn Ulric Univ Werner wish woman women