Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > Ruskin, John - Timothy Peltason (essay date 1990)
Ruskin, John - Timothy Peltason (essay date 1990)
Timothy Peltason (essay date 1990)
SOURCE: "Ruskin's Finale: Vision and Imagination in Praeterita," in ELH, Vol. 57, No. 3, Fall, 1990, pp. 665-83.
[In the following essay, Peltason examines Ruskin's last work, Praeterita, which he wrote after he had suffered several bouts of mental illness.]
Like the "Mutabilitie Cantos" or the last awkward bow of Keats's letters, the final paragraphs of John Ruskin's Praeterita have a conclusive rightness that cannot easily be ascribed either to chance or to design. The book stops well short of its projected length, just four chapters into a third volume, but at a moment in Ruskin's troubled history when he knew that any words he wrote might be his last. To follow closely the rise and fall and associative flow of these two remarkable paragraphs is to be drawn backward into the rest of Praeterith and into the whole tangled discussion in Ruskin's writings of the familiar...
[The entire page is 8288 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- Audrey Williamson (essay date 1976)
- Marc Shell (essay date 1978)
- John Dixon Hunt (essay date 1982)
- Robert Hewison (essay date 1982)
- Francis G. Townsend (essay date 1982)
- Richard L. Stein (essay date 1985)
- Anthony Hecht (essay date 1985)
- Dinah Birch (essay date 1988)
- Brian Maidment (essay date 1988)
- Timothy Peltason (essay date 1990)
- Richard Dellamora (essay date 1990)
- Paul Sawyer (essay date 1990)
- Sheila Emerson (essay date 1991)
- E. H. Gombrich (essay date 1991)
- David C. Hanson (essay date 1993)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
