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4 Nervous ReincarNations: Keats, Scenery, and Mind Cure in Canada during the Post-Confederation Period, with Particular Reference to Archibald Lampman and Related Cases
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D. M. R. Bentley
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Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction 1
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Nervous Containments: Recollection and Influence
- De Quincey Collects Himself 23
- Mrs. Julian T. Marshall’s Life and Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley 47
- Between Action and Inaction: The “Performance” of the Prima Donna in Eliot ’s Closet Drama 65
- Nervous ReincarNations: Keats, Scenery, and Mind Cure in Canada during the Post-Confederation Period, with Particular Reference to Archibald Lampman and Related Cases 93
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A Matter of Balance: Byronic Illness and Victorian Cure
- Early Romantic Theorists and The Fate of Transgressive Eloquence: John Stuart Mill’s Response to Byron 123
- Dyspeptic Reactions: Thomas Carlyle and the Byronic Temper 141
- “Growing Pains”: Representing the Romantic in Gaskell’s Wives and Daughters 163
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Hesitation and Inheritance: The Case of Sara Coleridge
- Snuffing Out an Article: Sara Coleridge and the Early Victorian Reception of Keats 189
- Her Father’s “Remains”: Sara Coleridge’s Edition of Essays on His Own Times 207
- Opium Addictions and Meta-Physicians: Sara Coleridge’s Editing of Biographia Literaria 229
- Bibliography 253
- Contributors 275
- Index 277
Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction 1
-
Nervous Containments: Recollection and Influence
- De Quincey Collects Himself 23
- Mrs. Julian T. Marshall’s Life and Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley 47
- Between Action and Inaction: The “Performance” of the Prima Donna in Eliot ’s Closet Drama 65
- Nervous ReincarNations: Keats, Scenery, and Mind Cure in Canada during the Post-Confederation Period, with Particular Reference to Archibald Lampman and Related Cases 93
-
A Matter of Balance: Byronic Illness and Victorian Cure
- Early Romantic Theorists and The Fate of Transgressive Eloquence: John Stuart Mill’s Response to Byron 123
- Dyspeptic Reactions: Thomas Carlyle and the Byronic Temper 141
- “Growing Pains”: Representing the Romantic in Gaskell’s Wives and Daughters 163
-
Hesitation and Inheritance: The Case of Sara Coleridge
- Snuffing Out an Article: Sara Coleridge and the Early Victorian Reception of Keats 189
- Her Father’s “Remains”: Sara Coleridge’s Edition of Essays on His Own Times 207
- Opium Addictions and Meta-Physicians: Sara Coleridge’s Editing of Biographia Literaria 229
- Bibliography 253
- Contributors 275
- Index 277