Critical And Historical Essays: Contributed To The Edinburgh Review
Condition: SECONDHAND
This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.
Condition remarks:
Book: Poor
Jacket: No dust jacket - some marks on spine and corners
Pages: Tanning and foxing
Markings: Previous owner
Condition remarks: Boards - detached.
A landmark collection of Victorian literary and historical criticism, Critical and Historical Essays: Contributed to the Edinburgh Review presents Lord Macaulay's most celebrated periodical writings, gathered from his prolific contributions to one of the nineteenth century's most influential journals. With sweeping intellectual confidence and a prose style renowned for its clarity and rhetorical force, Macaulay argues his assessments of towering historical figures — among them Clive, Hastings, Frederick the Great, and Milton — with the conviction of a man equally at home in Parliament and the archive. The essays illuminate the political, literary, and moral landscapes of their subjects, blending biographical narrative with sharp critical judgment to produce portraits that are as vivid as they are authoritative. Written with a tone that is at once magisterial and accessible, the collection illustrates Macaulay's gift for transforming dense historical material into compulsively readable prose. Widely regarded as essential reading for students of Victorian thought, British history, and the art of the essay, this volume remains a testament to the power of engaged, opinionated scholarship.
Author: Lord Macaulay
Format: Hardback
Published: 1874, Longmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer
Genre: Essays
Condition remarks:
Book: Poor
Jacket: No dust jacket - some marks on spine and corners
Pages: Tanning and foxing
Markings: Previous owner
Condition remarks: Boards - detached.
A landmark collection of Victorian literary and historical criticism, Critical and Historical Essays: Contributed to the Edinburgh Review presents Lord Macaulay's most celebrated periodical writings, gathered from his prolific contributions to one of the nineteenth century's most influential journals. With sweeping intellectual confidence and a prose style renowned for its clarity and rhetorical force, Macaulay argues his assessments of towering historical figures — among them Clive, Hastings, Frederick the Great, and Milton — with the conviction of a man equally at home in Parliament and the archive. The essays illuminate the political, literary, and moral landscapes of their subjects, blending biographical narrative with sharp critical judgment to produce portraits that are as vivid as they are authoritative. Written with a tone that is at once magisterial and accessible, the collection illustrates Macaulay's gift for transforming dense historical material into compulsively readable prose. Widely regarded as essential reading for students of Victorian thought, British history, and the art of the essay, this volume remains a testament to the power of engaged, opinionated scholarship.