The Lady of the Lake - Walter Scott - Böcker - Independently Published - 9798743099733 - 24 april 2021
Om omslag och titel inte matchar är det titeln som gäller

The Lady of the Lake

Walter Scott

The Lady of the Lake

After the unexpected popularity of The Lay of the Last Minstrel (1805), Walter Scott began The Lady of the Lake but laid it aside in favor of Marmion: A Tale of Flodden Field (1808), which was again a success with his readers. The Lady of the Lake is now regarded as a better poem than either The Lay of the Last Minstrel or Marmion and is probably read more often. After writing it, Scott created several other long poems of the same kind. His next, The Vision of Don Roderick (1811), failed to satisfy the expectations raised by his former efforts and was made to look all the worse when a previously little-known poet named Lord Byron came out in 1812 with the first half of his electrifying Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, which dealt not with the Scottish past but with the English present. Unwilling as yet to be shunted aside, Scott persevered with Rokeby (1813), a poem set in Yorkshire. He had little firsthand knowledge of that area and lacked the intuitive understanding of its people that had make his Scottish poems so popular; Rokeby, therefore, is the worst of his failures. Scott's The Bridal of Triermain (1813) is the first of many nineteenth century poems with an Arthurian theme. The Lord of the Isles (1815) and Harold the Dauntless (1817) have Scottish themes and each has some fine elements, but neither equals The Lady of the Lake. By the time they appeared, Scott had lost confidence in his abilities as a poet and was instead committed to a series of influential but anonymous historical novels, of which the first is Waverley: Or, 'Tis Sixty Years Since (1814; begun in 1805). It is his novels for which Scott has become best known by present-day readers.

Media Böcker     Pocketbok   (Bok med mjukt omslag och limmad rygg)
Releasedatum 24 april 2021
ISBN13 9798743099733
Utgivare Independently Published
Antal sidor 128
Mått 216 × 280 × 7 mm   ·   312 g
Språk Engelska  

Visa alla

Fler produkter med Walter Scott

Andra har också köpt

Andra i samma serie