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James Hogg Critical Essay | Critical Essay by David Groves

This literature criticism consists of approximately 35 pages of analysis & critique of James Hogg.
This section contains 10,411 words
(approx. 35 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our James Hogg - Critical Essay by David Groves

Critical Essay by David Groves

SOURCE: Groves, David. “Poetic Mirrors.” In James Hogg: The Growth of a Writer, pp. 54-85. Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press, 1988.

In the following excerpt, Groves evaluates Hogg as a Romantic poet.

Heroic values and a concern for national unity made The Queen's Wake an ideal poem for a country at war. Yet although its ‘plan proved extremely happy’, Hogg could see that the Wake was still ‘very imperfect and unequal’.1 During 1814 and 1815, years which brought glimpses of prosperity, James Hogg wrote a series of long poems which culminated in the brilliant and witty parodies of his Poetic Mirror. He also revised The Queen's Wake to make it more saleable, modernising ‘Kilmeny’ and taking Scott's advice in giving a happy ending to ‘The Witch of Fife’.

In 1814 Hogg was living in a rented ‘den under the North Bridge’, ‘in an odd-looking place called St. Ann Street’.2 The steep,...
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This section contains 10,411 words
(approx. 35 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our James Hogg - Critical Essay by David Groves
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James Hogg - Critical Essay by David Groves from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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