Mountain Gloom and Mountain Glory: The Development of the Aesthetics of the Infinite

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University of Washington Press, 1997 - 403 Seiten

To English poets and writers of the seventeenth century, as to their predecessors, mountains were ugly protuberances which disfigured nature and threatened the symmetry of earth; they were symbols God’s wrath. Yet, less than two centuries later the romantic poets sang in praise of mountain splendor, of glorious heights that stirred their souls to divine ecstasy. In this very readable and fascinating study, Marjorie Hope Nicolson considers the intellectual renaissance at the close of the seventeenth century that caused the shift from mountain gloom to mountain glory. She examines various writers from the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries and traces both the causes and the process of this drastic change in perception.

 

Inhalt

1 The Literary Heritage
34
2 The Theological Dilemma
72
3 New Philosophy
113
4 The Geological Dilemma
144
5A Sacred Theory of the Earth
184
6 The Burnet Controversy
225
7 The Aesthetics of the Infinite
271
8 A New Descriptive Poetry
324
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