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George Crabbe (1) (1754–1832)

Auteur de Peter Grimes: The Poor of the Borough

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent George Crabbe, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

41+ oeuvres 246 utilisateurs 4 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Image © ÖNB/Wien

Œuvres de George Crabbe

Crabbe: Selected Poems (1991) 32 exemplaires
The Borough: a poem (2008) 15 exemplaires
The Library: a poem (2007) 10 exemplaires
George Crabbe (Everyman's Poetry) (1933) 7 exemplaires
Poems 7 exemplaires
Tales of the Hall (2017) 6 exemplaires
Tales (2012) 5 exemplaires
The Voluntary Insane (1995) 4 exemplaires
Selected Poems of George Crabbe (Crown Classics) (1950) — Auteur — 4 exemplaires
Selected Poetry (1986) 4 exemplaires
The complete poetical works (1988) 3 exemplaires
The Village: a poem 3 exemplaires
The Parish Register: a poem (2004) 3 exemplaires
Poetical Works 2 exemplaires
Posthumous Poems of the Rev. George Crabbe — Directeur de publication — 1 exemplaire
L'Art Pour l'Art 1 exemplaire
Inebriety and the Candidate (2017) 1 exemplaire
The Newspaper: a poem 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

World Poetry: An Anthology of Verse from Antiquity to Our Time (1998) — Contributeur — 450 exemplaires
Eighteenth-Century English Literature (1969) — Auteur — 187 exemplaires
A Book of Narrative Verse (1930) — Contributeur — 64 exemplaires
The Norton Anthology of English Literature, 4th Edition, Volume 1 (1974) — Contributeur — 20 exemplaires

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Following on from his earlier The village and The parish register, this is a composite portrait in verse of a small town in 24 "letters". The unnamed town is obviously based on Crabbe's native Aldeburgh (although possibly also with elements of Woodbridge, where Crabbe worked for a time). Each letter focusses on a particular aspect of the life of the town, usually describing a single representative main character each time. The best-known of these, of course, are the unhappy single mother Ellen Orford and the doomed fisherman Peter Grimes, who feature in Benjamin Britten's opera. But there are also pictures of magistrates, doctors, publicans, actors, prostitutes, shopkeepers, clergymen, teachers, poor-law governors, gamblers, and many others.

Crabbe's descriptions range from the sardonic to the sympathetic. He has no tolerance for hypocrisy or religious dissent, but he is prepared to go a long way to understand the mixture of bad luck and human failings that land people in poverty and crime, and he argues strongly against the inhumanity of the poor relief system as it operated in Georgian times. Sometimes this brings him into odd collisions of utilitarian common-sense and romantic sympathy, but his efforts to put poor people — as individuals — into the centre of the story have a lot in common with what Wordsworth was doing.
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Signalé
thorold | Sep 3, 2022 |
Hardcover. Condition: Good. 8 vols. (175x110) Half titles. Title page vignette and frontispiece engraving in each. Original embossed cloth, gilt title, decorative embossed board and backstrip. Bumping at top and foot of backstrip, corners are bumped and slightly rubbed, some spotting to boards, some foxing of prelims. Tight set.
Valued at £150 Feb 2022.
 
Signalé
TheBoyPo | Feb 26, 2022 |
 
Signalé
ChelseaVK | Dec 10, 2021 |
"What forms the real picture of the poor?" asks Crabbe, in "The Village." Gritty poetry in couplets, strange but true.
 
Signalé
ostrom | Nov 29, 2007 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
41
Aussi par
5
Membres
246
Popularité
#92,613
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
4
ISBN
66
Langues
1

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