By some strange chance we have never seen his first publication, which, if it at all resembles its younger brother, must be by this time so popular that any notice of it on our part would seem idle and presumptuous ; but we gladly seize this opportunity... The Quarterly Review - Page 81edited by - 1833Full view - About this book
| John Louis Haney - Criticism - 1904 - 306 pages
...strange chance we have never seen his first publication, which, if it at all resembles its younge[r] brother, must be by this time so popular that any...poetry of which the lamented Keats was the harbinger ; and let us take this occasion to sing our palinode on the subject of ' Endymion.' We certainly did... | |
| John Louis Haney - Criticism - 1904 - 304 pages
...strange chance we have never seen his first publication, which, if it at all resembles its younge[r] brother, must be by this time so popular that any...admiration of our more sequestered readers a new prodigy of genius—another and a brighter star of that galaxy or milky way of poetry of which the lamented Keats... | |
| 1866 - 590 pages
...seize the opportunity of repairing an unintentional neglect, and of introducing to the examination of our more sequestered readers a new prodigy of genius...poetry of which the lamented Keats was the harbinger." Of course ibis is what Mr. Artemus Ward calls " sar-kazzum," as the reviewer takes care to let you... | |
| Alfred Tennyson Baron Tennyson - 1907 - 376 pages
...Tennyson, identifies him with " Cockneydom." Lockhart is more explicit.i He introduces Tennyson as " a new prodigy of genius — another and a brighter...of that galaxy or milky way of poetry of which the late lamented Keats was the harbinger." Bulwer continues the same gibe in his New Timon,1 in which... | |
| Sir William Robertson Nicoll, Thomas Seccombe - England - 1907 - 482 pages
...brutal criticism in The Quarterly, in which he was pleasantly alluded to as a particular star in the milky way of poetry, of which the lamented Keats was the harbinger, cut Tennyson to the quick. A deeper sorrow by far, however, was now to fall upon the poet, and to tinge... | |
| Francis Fisher Browne, Waldo Ralph Browne, Scofield Thayer - Literature - 1909 - 316 pages
...strange chance we have never seen his first publication, which, if it at all resembles its younger brother, must be by this time so popular that any...which the lamented Keats was the harbinger. . . . We have to offer Mr. Tennyson our tribute of unmingled approbation, and it is very agreeable to us, as... | |
| Literature - 1909 - 860 pages
...describes them with the acme of irony as equal to anything la Keats, and the author as "another and brighter star of that galaxy or milky way of poetry of which the lamented Keats was harbinger." More creditable to the Review at this time was the magisterial article by Nlmrod (Charles... | |
| Charles Wells Moulton - American literature - 1910 - 760 pages
...strange chance we have never seen his first publication, which, if it at all resembles its younger brother, must be by this time so popular that any...poetry of which the lamented Keats was the harbinger. — LOCKHART, JOHN GIBSON (?), 1833, Poemt by Alfred Tennyson, Quarterly Review, vol. 49, p. 81. He... | |
| Charles Wells Moulton - American literature - 1910 - 776 pages
...strange chance we have never seen his first publication, which, if it at all resembles its younger brother, must be by this time so popular that any...star of that galaxy or milky way of poetry of which tho lamented Keats was the harbinger. — LOCKHART, JOHN GIBSON (?), 1833, Poems by Alfred Tennyson,... | |
| Alfred Tennyson Baron Tennyson - 1914 - 476 pages
...strange chance we have never seen his first publication, which, if it at all resembles its younger brother, must be by this time so popular that any...or milky way of poetry of which the lamented Keats waa the harbinger. . . . Warned by our former mishap [ie in the case of Keats], wiser by experience,... | |
| |