R.H. Hutton, Critic and Theologian: The Writings of R.H. Hutton on Newman, Arnold, Tennyson, Wordsworth, and George EliotClarendon Press, 1986 - 225 páginas During his thirty-six years as editor of the Spectator, R.H. Hutton scrutinized the Victorian society of which he was an influential member. Writing on literature, religion, and politics, he was described by his contemporary, John Morely, as "the finest and bravest critic of this generation." In this first full-length study of Hutton's articles, Dr. Woodfield concentrates on his considerations of five prominent figures: J.H. Newman, Matthew Arnold, Alfred Lord Tennyson, William Wordsworth, and George Eliot. |
Índice
18261897 | 1 |
Literature and Secularization | 23 |
J H Newman | 43 |
Direitos de autor | |
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R.H. Hutton, Critic and Theologian: The Writings of R.H. Hutton on Newman ... Malcolm Woodfield Visualização de excertos - 1986 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
aesthetic argument Arnold's poetry Arnoldian authority Bagehot belief Caird Cardinal Newman Catholic character Christian Church clerisy Clough Contemporary Review culture describes Diaries of John discussion distinction emotions ethics expression faith feeling Feuerbach fiction G. H. Lewes George Eliot Grammar of Assent human Hutton argues Hutton felt Hutton finds Hutton seems Hutton wrote Ibid Illative Sense imagination implicit intellectual J. H. Newman James Martineau Jane Austen John Henry Newman journal July June language Leslie Stephen Liberal literary criticism Literary Essays 1896 literature London Loss and Gain Martineau Matthew Arnold meaning Middlemarch mind Modern Guides moral National Review nature notion novel novelist Oxford Sermons phrase poem poet poetic political prose Prospective Review published R. H. Hutton reader readership reading religion religious resistance Romola sceptical Scott secular Spectator spiritual style suggest sympathy Tennyson theology thought translation truth Unitarian Victorian Walter Bagehot Wordsworth Wordsworthian writing