Eliot, George - Rose Elizabeth Cleveland (essay date 1885)
Rose Elizabeth Cleveland (essay date 1885)
SOURCE: "George Eliot's Poetry," in George Eliot's Poetry and Other Studies, Funk and Wagnalls, 1885, pp. 9-23.
[In the following excerpt, Cleveland contends that Eliot's verses lack the lyricism and vision which, she argues, are marks of genuine poetry.]
I come at once to the consideration of George Eliot's verse in the mention of two qualities which it seems to me to lack, and which I hold to be essentials of poetry.
The first of these two qualities has to do with form, and is a property, if not the whole, of the outside, that which affects and (if anything could do this) stops with the senses. Yet here, as elsewhere in this department of criticism, it is diffcult to be exact. I ask myself, Is it her prosody? and am obliged to find it faultless as Pope's. There is never in her metres a syllable too much or too little. Mrs. Browning's metre is often slovenly, her rhymes are often false....
[The entire page is 2200 words long]
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Criticism
- The Nation (review date 1868)
- Henry James (review date 1868)
- London Quarterly Review (review date 1868)
- The Spectator (review date 1874)
- Rose Elizabeth Cleveland (essay date 1885)
- Miriam Allott (essay date 1961)
- K. M. Newton (essay date 1973)
- William Baker (essay date 1975)
- Kathleen Blake (essay date 1980)
- Karen B. Mann (essay date 1980)
- F. B. Pinion (essay date 1981)
- Victor A. Neufeldt (essay date 1983)
- Sylvia Kasey Marks (essay date 1983)
- Bonnie J. Lisle (essay date 1984)
- James Krasner (essay date 1994)
- Michael Ragussis (essay date 1995)
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