Literary studies, volume 2 (of 2) by Walter Bagehot
"Literary studies, volume 2 (of 2)" by Walter Bagehot is a collection of literary essays written in the late 19th century. It offers keen, often witty portraits of major historians, poets, and novelists, blending biography with analyses of style, culture, religion, and politics. Readers encounter critical studies of figures from Gibbon and Dickens to Wordsworth and Tennyson, alongside reflective appendices on belief, conviction, and toleration. The opening of the volume is Bagehot’s
essay on Edward Gibbon, which briskly sketches Gibbon’s lineage (including his speculating grandfather of South Sea Bubble fame), his sickly childhood and aunt-guided education, and his voracious, desultory early reading. Bagehot recounts Gibbon’s unhappy stint at Oxford, his teenage conversion to Roman Catholicism under the spell of Middleton’s arguments, his removal to Lausanne, reconversion under the Protestant pastor Pavilliard, and his prudent breaking off of a youthful engagement with Mademoiselle Curchod. He follows Gibbon back to England—through militia service, disciplined classical study, a French critical treatise tempered by Hume’s advice to write in English, entry into Parliament supporting Lord North, and the immediate success of the first volume of The Decline and Fall. Bagehot then assesses Gibbon’s method: a grand, ceremonious style “in minuet time,” immense research and compositional mastery, and particular brilliance on Constantinople and imperial machinery. He also pinpoints limits—the neglect of common life and vivid character, a cool misunderstanding of the inner religious spirit of Rome and early Christianity, and a somewhat flattened view of the barbarian world—while distinguishing the demands of universal versus particular history. The section reads as a compact life-and-works critique that sets Gibbon’s achievement, style, and blind spots in clear relief. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
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About this eBook
| Author | Bagehot, Walter, 1826-1877 |
|---|---|
| Editor | Hutton, Richard Holt, 1826-1897 |
| Title | Literary studies, volume 2 (of 2) |
| Original Publication | London: Longmans, Green & Co., 1891. |
| Contents | Edward Gibbon (1856) -- Bishop Butler (1854) -- Sterne and Thackeray (1864) -- The Waverly novels (1858) -- Charles Dickens (1858) -- Thomas Babington Macaulay (1856) -- Béranger (1857) -- Mr. Clough's poems (1862) -- Henry Crabb Robinson (1869) -- Wordsworth, Tennyson, and Browning; or, Pure, ornate, and grotesque art in English poetry (1864) -- Appendix: The ignorance of man (1862). On the emotion of conviction (1871). The metaphysical basis of toleration (1874). The public worship regulation bill (1874). |
| Credits | Tim Lindell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries) |
| Language | English |
| LoC Class | PR: Language and Literatures: English literature |
| Subject | English literature -- History and criticism |
| Category | Text |
| eBook-No. | 78450 |
| Release Date | Apr 15, 2026 |
| Copyright | Public domain in the USA. |
| Downloads | 608 downloads in the last 30 days. |
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