Later he writed a series of short stories for children, and the novel “The picture of Dorian Gray”. After his first and only novel he developed an interest in drama and produced a series of plays. However both the novel and the tragedy damaged the writer’s reputation, since the former was considered immoral, and the latter was prevented from appearing o
Lingue
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Characters: his characters are neither heroic ones, as in the old romances, nor picaresque ones, as in Defoe. Richardson , in fact, is the first writer to put, at the centre of his works, the new middle-class people, with their problems and desires.
Richardson's novels are epistolary, in fact they are made up of letters. The advantages of this kind
NATURE: a common feature of romantic poets is to consider nature as living organism of which man takes part: nature is a mirror of feelings and passions which shake man and by them he reaches an internal balance. In particular Blake’s characters reaches this balance through God’s knowledge, for the fact that he is present in nature and in animals like t
Eventually a ship of mutineers lands on the island. Crusoe rescues its officers and is taken back to England.
GULLIVER’S TRAVELS: the summary
It purports to be a “true” travel account by the ship’s doctor Lemuel Gulliver with a maps of the places visited and full particulars about Gulliver’s family life. It includes realistic details to mak
Stanzas 22 - 32: the poem ends with the supposed death of the author, his burial in the same churchyard and the epitaph on his tomb.
Comment: the neoclassical idealization of poor country life conceals the denunciation of what poverty means in term of hardship and unfulfilment so that the "rude forefathers" come to be seen in the double role of bot
Hardy’s wish to represent life in some of its most sombre and cruel aspects in contrast with the Victorian’s readers who represented life as they thought it ought to be.
Most of Hardy’s novels are set in the countryside and show his affection for the vanishing agricultural world in the face of increasing urbanization. A deep pessimism characterises
Another theme is freedom, in fact he believes, like Rousseau that (" man is born free and everywhere he is in chains") so he exalted the American and the French revolutions. His love for justice and freedom led him to oppose to any type of institution, including church and state, to symphatize with the oppressed classes and even to support the vendicat
PREFACE TO LYRICAL BALLADS: he defines poetry as the spontaneous overflow feelings and it takes origin from emotion recollected in tranquillity. Role of poet: the poet is a man like other men, but endowed with a higher sensibility, so he is able to recognize the spirit of things. Language: the language should be that spoken by men, even if purified of
The theme of the ambivalence is reinforced by the symbolism of Jeckyll's house, whose two façades are symbolically the two opposite sides of the same man: the front of this house, used by the doctor, is fair; while the rear side, used by Hide, is "part of a sinister block of buildings, which showed no windows". Mr Hide is deformed and smaller than Dr
Main features: he wrote in the XX century, so he was influenced by the french naturalism and the decadence. Thus he used in his works new tecniques such as the impersonality of the author, the symbolism, the psycological analysis and the epiphany.
As regard impersonality, Joice abandons the omniscient narrator of the 19th century and the story is t