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  1. May 10, 2024 · As David Masson notes, it “does not accord perfectly with any of the traditional definitions,” and even De Quincey does not “[keep] very strictly to [it]” in the rest of his essay. 21 In fact, De Quincey may have found the concept too narrowly delimited for practical application and public relevance. Whatever the reason, in subsequent writings on literature, De Quincey offers a further ...

  2. Sep 20, 2012 · Thomas De Quincey (b. 1785–d. 1859), autobiographer and essayist, is best known for Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (1821, 1856), the foundational modern account of drug addiction. His prolific output for the periodical press also included memorable reminiscences of Wordsworth, Coleridge, and their circle; his essays on “On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts”; and quirkily ...

  3. Mar 5, 2013 · Over the years from 1823 to 1848 his conception of the experience of power obviously underwent marked shifts: the essentially emotional experience described in the Letters to a Young Man Whose Education Has Been Neglected (1823) had assumed a decidedly ethical cast by the time De Quincey turned to it in the essay on The Poetry of Pope (1848). One can, however, despite such shifts, make certain ...

    • John W. Bilsland
    • 1957
  4. Aug 15, 2024 · In the following essay, Roberts examines De Quincey's reading of Wordsworth and Coleridge's poetry within the context of De Quincey's literary life and the deve Select an area of the website to search

  5. Thomas De Quincey 1785-1859 English essayist, critic, and novelist. A versatile essayist and accomplished critic, De Quincey used his own life as the subject of his most acclaimed work, the ...

  6. Jan 9, 2019 · In an essay on “The Poetry of Pope,” De Quincey refers to power as an attribute of sublime Miltonic literature that links us to the infinite: “What you owe to Milton is not any knowledge,” De Quincey writes, “of which a million separate items are still but a million of advancing steps on the same earthly level; what you owe is power,—that is, exercise and expansion to your own ...

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  8. Nov 20, 2007 · While critics have often commented on the distinction between knowledge and power that emerges in Thomas De Quincey’s definition of literature, such comment has tended to read the definition in isolation from its context in “Letters to a Young Man Whose Education Has Been Neglected” (1823). De Quincey does not merely celebrate literature for the heightened emotional state that it ...

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