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5 - ‘The postscript of the Augustans’ and the opposite of the romance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2010

Hermann Fischer
Affiliation:
Universität Mannheim, Germany
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Summary

In the field of aesthetics historic necessity, the ‘fury of extinction’ (Hegel) strictly forbids compromise of any kind.

T.W. Adorno, Philosophie der Neuen Musik, 1949, p. 3

Thomas Campbell

Polished, worked up, touched and retouched into sweet and artificial beauty … simple – but insipid.

Blackwood's Magazine, 96, January 1825 (review of Campbell's Theodr

In 1809, when Campbell brought out his first tale in verse, Gertrude of Wyoming, he already had a significant reputation as a poet. He was Scotland's prince among poets until Scott took over from him with his Lay. Byron, however, still placed him among the top contemporary poets in his famous pyramid of poets, and even in 1829 Goethe considered him to be the most important modern British poet after Byron, although he also stressed that he (Goethe) did not feel at home with the newer English poetry. This fame was established by several lively ballads full of national spirit and empire sentiment and in particular by The Pleasures of Hope (1799), a reflective poem in pure neoclassical style, and a successor to Akenside's Pleasures of the Imagination (1744, 1757) and Rogers' Pleasures of Memory (1792) with echoes of Pope, Thomson, Cowper, Johnson and Goldsmith.

Type
Chapter
Information
Romantic Verse Narrative
The History of a Genre
, pp. 120 - 145
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1991

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