| 1965 - 416 páginas
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| Christopher Isherwood - 1983 - 94 páginas
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| Anne Fleming - 1983 - 296 páginas
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| Meg Harris Williams - 1987 - 264 páginas
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| Nigel Wood - 1993 - 216 páginas
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| George Gordon Byron - 1994 - 884 páginas
...how the poet saw himself. (He wrote to his last love, Teresa Guiccioli, 'I should like to know who shall guide : Crownless, breathless, headless fall, Son and sire, the house of S any body since the Trojan war'.) But the elegantly cynical narrator of Don Juan is also unmistakeably... | |
| Moyra Haslett - 1997 - 328 páginas
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| Sonia Hofkosh - 1998 - 212 páginas
...off a girl from a convent, Byron remarks, perhaps only half facetiously, "I should like to know who has been carried off- except poor dear me I have been...- and I can account for the invention of neither" (v1, 237). With typical Byronic inversion, the poet calls attention to his sexual mastery by denying... | |
| George Wilson Knight - 2002 - 416 páginas
...lived in' (Antony and Cleopatra, v, ii, 89). Besides, the ladies were so often the dominating partners: 'I have been more ravished myself than anybody since the Trojan war' (Hoppner, 29 Oct. 1819; LJ, iv, 370). Neither Marianna nor Margarita could serve as lasting Cleopatra... | |
| Thomas Moore - 2004 - 496 páginas
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