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R. P. Gillies
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R. P. Gillies : Egbert, or, The Suicide
William Wordsworth to R. P.Gillies, 23 November 1814: 'I have to thank you ... for Egbert, which is pleasingly and vigorously written, and proves that with a due sacrifice of exertion, you will be capable of performing things that will have a strong claim on the regards of posterity. But keep, I pray you, to the great models; there is in some parts of this tale, particuarly page fourth, too much of a bad writer - Lord Byron ... towards the conclusion, the intervention of the peasant is not only unnecessary, but injurious to the tale ... '
UnknownCentury: 1800-1849 Reader/Listener/Group: William Wordsworth
R. P. Gillies : Ruminator, The
William Wordsworth to R. P.Gillies, 23 November 1814: 'I have peeped into the Ruminator, and turned to your first letter, which is well executed, and seizes the attention very agreeably. Your longer poem I have barely looked into ... '
Century: 1800-1849 Reader/Listener/Group: William Wordsworth Print: Book
R. P. Gillies : Childe Alarique, a poet's reverie with other poems
William Wordsworth to R. P.Gillies, 23 November 1814: 'Your longer poem I have barely looked into ... '
Century: 1800-1849 Reader/Listener/Group: William Wordsworth Print: Book
R. P. Gillies : Exile, The
William Wordsworth to R. P. Gillies, 22 December 1814: 'When your Letter arrived I was in the act of reading to Mrs W[ordsworth] your Exile, which pleased me more, I think, than anything that I have read of yours ... I was particularly charmed with the seventeenth stanza, first part ... which I shall often repeat to myself ... '
Century: 1800-1849 Reader/Listener/Group: William Wordsworth Print: Book
R. P. Gillies : The Ruminator
William Wordsworth to R. P. Gillies, 22 December 1814: 'I have read the Ruminator, and I fear that I do not like it quite as much as you would wish. It wants depth and strength, yet it is pleasingly and elegantly written, and contains everywhere the sentiments of a liberal spirit.'
Century: 1800-1849 Reader/Listener/Group: William Wordsworth Print: Book
R. P. Gillies : Illustrations of a Poetical Character, in six Tales, with other Poems
William Wordsworth to R. P. Gillies (postmarked 9 April 1816): 'Your obliging Present [new book of poems] reached me yesterday ... I read the volume through immediately: and paid particular attention to the parts that were new to me.'
UnknownCentury: 1800-1849 Reader/Listener/Group: William Wordsworth Print: Book
R. P. Gillies : Rinaldo, a desultory Poem
William Wordsworth to R. P. Gillies: " ... your poem [Rinaldo] I have read with considerable attention."
UnknownCentury: 1800-1849 Reader/Listener/Group: William Wordsworth
R. P. Gillies : Oswald, A Metrical Tale
'I have read your Poem. I like it better than any of the preceding ones.'