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Book English bards and Scottish columnists

FU676554

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Ukrainian
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In 1807, Byron's first collection of poems, Leisure Hours, was published, which was reviewed unkindly by the Edinburgh Review. Byron responded with a scathing satire, The English Bards and Scotch Reviewers (1809). In this early satire, Byron not only caustically ridiculed the editors of the Edinburgh Review for their mediocrity and reactionaryness, but also sharply criticized almost all the authorities of the literature of romanticism of the 1800s - Wordsworth, Coleridge, Southey, Moore, Scott, Lewis. Despite the immaturity of many of his judgments, with a clear underestimation of the significance of the work of Wordsworth and Coleridge, Byron took a step forward in the development of aesthetics by decisively separating art from religion. This was reflected in Byron's many years of fascination with free-thinking and atheistic poetry and philosophy of the 18th century, and his commitment to educational “reason.”



The book’s text has been translated from the original language using an artificial intelligence system. In most cases, the translation is accurate and clear, but occasionally there may be incorrect phrasing or individual words left untranslated.
Name of the Author
Джордж Байрон Гордон
Language
Ukrainian
Translator
Сергей Андреевич Ильин

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Book English bards and Scottish columnists

In 1807, Byron's first collection of poems, Leisure Hours, was published, which was reviewed unkindly by the Edinburgh Review. Byron responded with a scathin...

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