Copyright
Adrian PoolePublished On
2024-03-21ISBN
Paperback978-1-80511-278-5
Hardback978-1-80511-279-2
PDF978-1-80511-280-8
HTML978-1-80511-283-9
EPUB978-1-80511-281-5
Language
- English
Print Length
102 pages (xii+90)Dimensions
Paperback156 x 8 x 234 mm(6.14" x 0.31" x 9.21")
Hardback156 x 8 x 234 mm(6.14" x 0.31" x 9.21")
Weight
Paperback206g (7.27oz)
Hardback210g (7.41oz)
Media
Illustrations12
OCLC Number
1427749636LCCN
2023446238THEMA
- DSBD
- DN
- DS
BIC
- DS
- DSC
- BGL
BISAC
- LIT004120
- LIT024030
- LIT024040
LCC
- PR4388
Keywords
- Lord Byron
- Trinity College, University of Cambridge
- Bicentennial commemoration
- Memorials, marbles, and ancient ruins
- Greece
- Albert Bertel Thorvaldsen
Byron and Trinity
Memorials, Marbles and Ruins
- Adrian Poole (editor)
This collection of essays reprints previously published writings about Trinity College Cambridge's most celebrated writer, Lord Byron, for the bicentennial commemoration of his death on 19 April 1824. Bringing together diverse contributions from a series of scholars, three of them fellows of Trinity College, it explores various aspects of Byron’s life and writing. The collection draws out the relationships between ‘memorials, marbles and ruins’, themes always prominent in his thinking and feeling.
The earliest essay reprinted here dates from the bicentenary of Byron’s birth in 1788. Thirty-six years and two centuries later, this collection honours a figure of enduring, complex significance, with whom Trinity College is proud to be associated. It will be of value to scholars and students of Byron, as well as those interested in his life, in the bi-centenary year of his death.
Contents
Foreword
(pp. 1–2)- Adrian Poole
- Anne Barton
- Robert Beevers
- Charles Tennyson Turner
4. Poets and Travellers
(pp. 37–64)- William St Clair
5. Byron, Stephens and the Future of Ruins
(pp. 65–78)- Adrian Poole
Contributors
Adrian Poole
(editor)Emeritus Professor of English Literature at University of Cambridge
Fellow of Trinity College at University of Cambridge
Adrian Poole (1948– ) is an Emeritus Professor of English Literature at Cambridge University and Fellow of Trinity College. His research interests include comparative tragedy, prose fiction, and the impact of Shakespeare on English literature. In 2022, he won the Modern Language Association Prize for his scholarly edition of Henry James’s novel The Princess Casamassima, part of The Cambridge Edition of the Complete Fiction of Henry James.