Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Thomas Hardy

Thomas Hardy GUIdE TO ThE YEAR'S WORk 363 group's interests, even as Browning's Pope Innocent represents unpopular truth [condemning the defendant]--and by extension Browning's poetic sense of truth as an ideal obscured, not revealed, by appearances" (p. 103). Young considers various moments in the film in relation to Browning, arguing that in the course of the film, characters become absorbed "into illustrations of hypocrites' Browning epigraph, spoken in the poem by Pope Innocent himself: `What does the world, told truth, but lie the more' " (p. 105). In other Browning notes, Colleen Jaurretche speculates that Browning's "aesthetic of evolving personality" had a significant impact on Joyce and that Joyce's short stories may reflect this legacy (" `Leafy Speafing': Drama and Finnegan's Wake," Joyce Studies Annual [2015]: 171­177). Hope Johnston's "Readers' Memorials in Early Editions of Chaucer" (Studies in Bibliography 59 [2015]: 45­69) describes Browning's memorial dedication to Elizabeth Barrett Browning on her copy of Spegth's rare 1602 edition of Chaucer, whom Barrett held in high regard (p. 56). Following Barrett Browning's death, Browning inscribes the book in Greek. He chooses a line from Euripides's Rhesus: " `The dawn is at hand, the dawn is breaking and this star is one http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Victorian Poetry West Virginia University Press

Thomas Hardy

Victorian Poetry , Volume 54 (3) – Jan 7, 2016

Loading next page...
 
/lp/west-virginia-university-press/thomas-hardy-pVPZOQVB3W

References

References for this paper are not available at this time. We will be adding them shortly, thank you for your patience.

Publisher
West Virginia University Press
Copyright
Copyright © 2008 West Virginia University.
ISSN
1530-7190
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

GUIdE TO ThE YEAR'S WORk 363 group's interests, even as Browning's Pope Innocent represents unpopular truth [condemning the defendant]--and by extension Browning's poetic sense of truth as an ideal obscured, not revealed, by appearances" (p. 103). Young considers various moments in the film in relation to Browning, arguing that in the course of the film, characters become absorbed "into illustrations of hypocrites' Browning epigraph, spoken in the poem by Pope Innocent himself: `What does the world, told truth, but lie the more' " (p. 105). In other Browning notes, Colleen Jaurretche speculates that Browning's "aesthetic of evolving personality" had a significant impact on Joyce and that Joyce's short stories may reflect this legacy (" `Leafy Speafing': Drama and Finnegan's Wake," Joyce Studies Annual [2015]: 171­177). Hope Johnston's "Readers' Memorials in Early Editions of Chaucer" (Studies in Bibliography 59 [2015]: 45­69) describes Browning's memorial dedication to Elizabeth Barrett Browning on her copy of Spegth's rare 1602 edition of Chaucer, whom Barrett held in high regard (p. 56). Following Barrett Browning's death, Browning inscribes the book in Greek. He chooses a line from Euripides's Rhesus: " `The dawn is at hand, the dawn is breaking and this star is one

Journal

Victorian PoetryWest Virginia University Press

Published: Jan 7, 2016

There are no references for this article.