# | Year | Text | Linked Data |
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1 | 1924 |
Tang, Chengbo. Bailun de shi dai ji Bailun de zuo pin [ID D26413]. Tang schreibt : "Byron's life-long career can be contained in the word 'rebellion'... Byron is a great second class poet, although the second class is not the best. His verse is the best poetry of emotional tragedy.... The disturbance and conflicts inside Byron's heart could only be expressed through his poetry. What he saw, felt, thought, fantasized, and dreamed of were only himself. Byron tried in vain to liberate himself from himself. All the sorrows, disillusions, revolts, sentiments, and travels in his poetry were his own." Chu Chih-yu : Tang Chengbo's essay, a translated version of Taine's chapter [History of English literature], is one the first attempts to introduce Byron as a poet. It covers Byron's social background, poems, style, his European influence, and Byron in the eyes of Western critics. |
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# | Year | Bibliographical Data | Type / Abbreviation | Linked Data |
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1 | 1924 | Tang, Chengbo. Bailun de shi dai ji Bailun de zuo pin. In : Xiao shuo yue bao ; vol. 15, no 4 (1924). [Artikel über George Gordon Byron]. | Publication / Byr25 |
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