Wordsworth and Coleridge : lyrical ballads / John Blades.
Material type:
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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EWU Library | 821.708 BLW (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | C-1 | Available | 4449-15917 | |||
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EWU Library Reserve Section | Non-fiction | 821.708 BLW 2004 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | C-2 | Not For Loan | 15918 |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 287-288) and index.
TOC Some Important Events During the Lives of Wordsworth and Coleridge --
Analysing Lyrical Ballads --
Childhood and the Growth of the Mind --
'Lucy Gray' --
'We are seven' --
'There was a Boy' --
'Nutting' --
Imagination --
'Lines written a few miles above Tintern Abbey' --
'The Nightingale' --
'Love' --
Old Age: a 'vital anxiousness' --
Michael: A Pastoral Poem --
'The Old Cumberland Beggar' --
'The Fountain' --
Social Issues: 'the mean and vulgar works of man' --
'The Convict' --
'The Female Vagrant' --
'The Thorn' --
Nature and the Supernatural: 'the strangeness of it' --
'Lines written in early spring' --
'The Tables Turned' --
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner --
The Context and the Critics --
The Politics of Wordsworth and Coleridge --
Wordsworth and the 'Rabble-rousers' --
Coleridge and dreams of Utopia --
1798 and after --
Reading and Writing in Eighteenth-Century England --
Publishing, printing and book-selling --
Effects on writers --
Readers: education and literacy --
The Ballad revival --
The Poet as Critic and Theorist --
Wordsworth and 'pre-established codes of decision' --
'five hundred Sir Isaac Newtons': Coleridge's literary theory --
Dorothy Wordsworth and the Lake Poets --
Dorothy among the poets --
'more than half a poet': home at Alfoxden and Grasmere --
Dorothy herself: 'Come forth and feel the sun' --
Critical Responses to Lyrical Ballads --
I. A. Richards --
Robert Mayo --
Geoffrey H. Hartman --
Paul de Man.
English
Rokon Mahamud
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