The Poetical Works of Robert Browning: Volume VIII. The Ring and the Book, Books V-VIIIIn old age, Browning always referred people to The Ring and the Book as his finest achievement. This is the second of the three volumes of the Oxford edition presenting this great Italian murder-story, including the monologues of the villain, the aristocrat Guido Franceschini, Pompilia his abused wife, and Caponsacchi, the priest who tries to rescue her from death. The commentary, at the bottom of each page, elucidates Browning's creative and sometimes challenging use of language with reference to his correspondence, his historical sources, and his own rich experience of Italy. Previously unidentified allusions are fully explained, and a newly discovered source from a seventeenth-century Italian chronicle is presented for the first time (in Appendix B), allowing further insight into Browning's engagement with history. The copy text of 1888-9 has numerous emendations to its punctuation, both those authorized by the poet in the last year of his life and those resulting from corrected compositors' errors, and these, combined with fourteen emendations to substantives, produce a text as near as possible to Browning's final intentions. |
Какво казват хората - Напишете рецензия
Не намерихме рецензии на обичайните места.
Съдържание
INTRODUCTION TO BOOK V | 3 |
INTRODUCTION TO BOOK VI ΙΟΙ | 101 |
INTRODUCTION TO BOOK VII | 203 |
INTRODUCTION TO BOOK VIII | 292 |
APPENDICES | 387 |
E Compositors | 400 |
Други издания - Преглед на всички
Често срещани думи и фрази
Arcangeli Arezzo arms babe bear beginning of fo beginnings of lines Book break breath Browning Browning's Caponsacchi child Christ Church comma Count Court death face fact father flight give Guido hand hate head heart honour hope husband indicated by N.P. Italy judges Latin leave left-hand margin letters line added later live look lords marks at beginnings marriage means mind mother murder natural never night once paragraph indicated perhaps Pietro play Pompilia poor priest prove punishment quotation marks reached reference Rome round Saint seems sense Sirs soul speak speech stand supposed tell thing thought took touch true truth turn whole wife write wrong Yale young