Road to Egdon Heath: The Aesthetics of the Great in NatureMcGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 1999 - 409 pages Bevis examines a wide range of English, European, and North American texts, literary works as well as religious, scientific, and travel writing. He surveys the literature on mountain climbing, sea voyages, desert travel, and polar exploration, and its metaphorical uses in poetry and fiction. Relying on Addison's term "the Great" rather than "the sublime," he shows how works such as Darwin's journals, Lyell's studies in geology, and de Saussure's books on the Alps helped form an outlook on nature that also found frequent literary expression. A wide-ranging, interdisciplinary work in the history of ideas, The Road to Egdon Heath traces the growth of an aesthetic sensibility that is now ubiquitous but which would have been incomprehensible prior to the Renaissance. This sensibility underlies not only much of modern literature but also our modern ideas about conservation, ecology, and environmentalism. |
Contents
UNDERPINNINGS | 9 |
the eiGHTEENTH CENTURY | 39 |
THE ROMANTIC PERIOD | 99 |
Fiction and Travel | 138 |
THE NINETEENTH CENTURY | 159 |
American Novelists and the Great | 204 |
Desert Travel 183070 | 223 |
The Meanings of Mountains 183070 | 239 |
The Great and Barren in European Literature | 263 |
Victorian Writers by the Sea of Doubt | 279 |
The 1870s | 303 |
THE HEATH REVISITED | 327 |
Chronology | 333 |
Lexicon | 349 |
375 | |
397 | |
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Common terms and phrases
Addison admiration aesthetic Alpine Alps appear Arctic awful barren beauty become begins Burnet called century chapter climb dark Darwin described desert desolate early earth Egdon emotions English eternal European example expedition experience explorers fear feeling felt geology gives glaciers gloom grand grandeur Group Hardy Heath heavens human icebergs idea imagination impressed interest Italy John journal kind land landscape later less letters lines look Lyell meaning mind Mont Blanc mountains moved nature night nineteenth-century noted observed ocean passage peaks philosophical plains poem poets polar published qualities reached region religious response rock Ruskin says scene scientific seems seen sense Shelley shows snow solitude soul space spiritual sublime suggests theory things thought tion travellers universe vast Voyage waste wild winter wonder Wordsworth writers wrote