Criticism > Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism > Adam Bede, George Eliot - Eneas Sweetland Dallas (review date 1859)
Adam Bede, George Eliot - Eneas Sweetland Dallas (review date 1859)
Eneas Sweetland Dallas (review date 1859)
SOURCE: “Adam Bede, from The Times,” in A Century of George Eliot Criticism, edited by George Haight, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1965, pp. 2-8.
[Originally published in 1859, the following review praises Adam Bede for demonstrating that despite social differences, people are more similar than not, and recommends the author for imbuing her characters with goodness.]
There can be no mistake about Adam Bede. It is a first-rate novel, and its author takes rank at once among the masters of the art. Hitherto known but as the writer of certain tales to which he gave the modest title of Scenes, and which displayed only the buds of what we have here in full blossom, he has produced a work which, after making every allowance for certain crudities of execution, impresses us with a sense of the novelist's maturity of thought and feeling. Very seldom are so much freshness...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Geraldine Jewsbury (review date 1859)
- W. L. Collins (review date 1859)
- Eneas Sweetland Dallas (review date 1859)
- The Westminster Review (review date 1876)
- Joseph Wiesenfarth (essay date 1972)
- Kenny Marotta (essay date 1976)
- Mason Harris (essay date 1978)
- Elizabeth Holtze (essay date 1983)
- Mason Harris (essay date 1983)
- Lori Lefkovitz (essay date 1987)
- Peggy Fitzhugh Johnstone (essay date 1989)
- James Eli Adams (essay date 1991)
- Daniel P. Gunn (essay date 1992)
- Mark Warren McLaughlin (essay date 1994)
- Caroline Levine (essay date 1996)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
